![]() Speaking of forced mate calculations, Chess Tiger often messes up that, too. Now, while I'd like the option to play things through to the finish to see how it's done, I'd like something that (akin to it saying M7+ or M7- for a forced mate in so many moves) will tell me when there is a forced draw in so many moves, too. Looking for a program that will tell me as many moves in advance as it knows where the line(s) that it's calculating will *actually* lead. Of course I'll still grant its 55-59 move deep calculations, because if it doesn't calculate suboptimal lines then it won't know what the best lines are, but still, the above issue stands.Īssuming that the D n refers to that it is calculating n moves deep, which is what I've inferred from the behaviour of the number in that field, but Chess Tiger comes with no instructions or explanation, so it's just an educated guess. Interestingly, playing through the six moves until the forced draw, it tells me on some moves that the positional score is 0.00, on some moves that it's +0.20, and some moves that it's +0.33 all with the same best line calculation. So why is it calculating 55 moves deep and telling me that White has an advantage of +0.33? Now, with best play, it's going to be a forced draw in 6 moves. ![]() Yet, the best line calculation on Chess Tiger reads: ![]() Now, with best play this position is clearly drawn, as White cannot get the pawn promoted unless Black plays suboptimally.
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