A newly published and original KRBNN vs kpp forced mate in two chess problem generated autonomously by Chesthetica using the 'Digital Synaptic Neural Substrate' computational creativity method. It does not use endgame tablebases, artificial neural networks, machine learning or any kind of typical AI. Chesthetica is able to generate mates in 2, mates in 3, mates in 4, mates in 5, study-like constructs and also compose problems using specific combinations of pieces fed into it (e.g. instructing it to compose something using a queen, rook and bishop vs. queen and two knights). Read more about it on ChessBase. The largest endgame tablebase in existence today is for 7 pieces (Lomonosov) which contains over 500 trillion positions, most of which have not been seen by human eyes. This problem with 8 pieces goes even beyond that and was therefore composed without any such help.
White to Play and Mate in 2
Chesthetica v11.86 (Selangor, Malaysia)
Generated on 19 Aug 2020 at 6:50:30 PM
The chess problems are published chronologically based on the composition date and time. However, later compositions may have an earlier version of Chesthetica listed because more than one computer (not all running the same version of the program) is used. What was the machine 'thinking' when it came up with this? Did you find this one interesting or have something else to say? Leave a comment below! Some of these problems may be trivial for you, especially if you're a club or master player but bear in mind that chess lovers can be found at all levels of play. So do check out some of the other problems. You can probably find something more to your taste.
Similar Chess Problems by Chesthetica: 00524, 02153.
Solution
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