ChessClassics Element
249,00 €*
Sofort verfügbar, versandfertig in 1-3 Tagen
Hersteller
Millennium 2000 GmbH
Alte Landstraße 21a
D-85521 Ottobrunn
Warnhinweis
Bitte beachten Sie, dass dieses Produkt kein Kinderspielzeug im Sinne der Richtlinie 2009/48/EG ist. Wenn Sie Ihre Kinder das Gerät benutzen lassen, weisen Sie diese entsprechend ein und achten Sie darauf, dass das Gerät nur bestimmungsgemäß benutzt wird.
Der Schachcomputer
Schachspezifische Eigenschaften: | |
---|---|
Geeignet für: | Alle Schachliebhaber, vom Grundschulkind bis zum Großmeister |
Spielstärke: | bis zu > 2300 ELO |
Magnetische Figuren: | Nein |
Abmessungen Schachbrett: | 32 x 32 cm |
Hardware: | |
Display mit Beleuchtung: | Ja, mehrstufig dimmbar |
Prozessor: | ARM Cortex M7 mit 300 MHz |
CPU Taktfrequenz: | Von 10 - 300 MHz variabel einstellbar |
Verbindung Brett-Modul: | Standard Mini-Din-Kabel, 4 polig |
RAM: | 384 KB |
Software: | |
Software: | ChessGenius , The King |
Autor: | Johan de Koning , Richard Lang |
Gerätesprachen: | 7 (GER / ENG / FRA / DUT / SPA / ITA / RUS) |
Menüsystem: | Textbasiert, alle Gerätesprachen |
Updatefähig: | Ja, via USB |
Stromversorgung: | |
Batterien notwendig: | Nein |
Netzteil enthalten: | Nein (Nutzung des Netzteils vom M820/M850) |
Netzteilanschluss: | Ja, 100 - 240V 50/60 Hz Input - 9V 1A Output |
Abmessungen und Gewichte: | |
Artikelgewicht: | 352 g |
Modellnummer und Altersempfehlung: | |
Modellnummer: | M827 |
Vom Hersteller empfohlenes Alter: | 6 - 99 Jahre |
14. März 2023 02:59
Human-like playing experience!
I hesitated a lot before pulling the trigger and buying the Chess Classics Element module. I already had the ChessLink and I was thinking with all the free chess engines out there, who needs 2 old-school chess engines in a module? Well, I was wrong! Those old school engines beat Stockfish hands down for fun of playing chess. I have mostly tested The King, which is extraordinary human-like in his style of play, often surprising and spectacular. It shows that this program has been refined and nurtured over the years to offer a thoroughly enjoyable experience. The adaptable ELO levels are very well-done, it's not some dumbed-down chess engines who play a string of GM moves and then suddenly do an atrocious blunder like hanging a Queen so that you have a chance to win, and then resume playing like a super-GM... I hate these engines, it just ruins the game. The King isn't like that, he will play solid for the level you select, but he's not perfect either, he takes some risks and makes mistakes here and there but nothing like an artifical dumb blunder. So you're rewarded with very tense, nail-biting games. You have to fight him till the bitter end, he doesn't go down willingly, but you can beat it if you play a good game, without making blunders yourself. Then, when you start to beat him more often both with White or Black, then just step up the ELO level a notch for an increased challenge. It has become my most used chess engine to play against. Technically-speaking, the control module connects easily and without fuss to the Millennium board, allowing quite a lot of options to interact with. The only thing that's not up to par is connecting with a PC to get PGNs of games. It's a cumbersome process, and you are better just writing the moves down on a sheet of a paper like in a real tournament (or any phone PGN app if you prefer).