Play against an engine

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Revision as of 13:12, 16 October 2021 by Jbolzano (talk | contribs)
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Playing against an engine in Lucas Chess is a very good way to practice your game. First of all, you can pick an engine like Maia (included) which mimics human play at certain levels (based on neural network technology):

Playing against an engine like Maia is helpful for your practice




Also, Lucas Chess has the concept of a Tutor: you make your moves, but if they are not good enough, the tutor will warn you and guide you to better moves. This is a really helpful feature to see when you are going wrong in your games.

Playing with a tutor is a great help



By clicking on Tutor change, you can configure your Tutor.

  • Which engine to use
  • How long the tutor should think (0 means until the Depth is reached)
  • Depth: how many half-moves (plies) should the engine think ahead
  • MultiPV: how many lines (best moves) do you want to see - more lines of course take longer
  • Sensitivity: how many centipawns of error will the engine allow for you
You can configure the tutor for best performance and learning