This is an original 'KQRP vs krbbnp' five-move chess construct composed autonomously by a computer using the Digital Synaptic Neural Substrate (DSNS) computational creativity approach. The DSNS does not use endgame tablebases, neural networks or any kind of machine learning found in traditional artificial intelligence (AI). It also has nothing to do with deep learning. This position contains a total of 10 pieces. The largest complete endgame tablebase in existence today is for seven pieces (containing over 500 trillion positions anyway) which means the problem could not have been taken from it regardless.
White to Play and Mate in 5
Chesthetica v12.54 (Selangor, Malaysia)
Generated on 26 Apr 2022 at 6:54:48 PM
Chesthetica, especially if running on multiple computers or operating system user accounts, is capable of generating far too many compositions than can be published in a timely fashion here. The newer ones will therefore only be published some time later. This is why the composition or generation date above does not match today's date. What was the machine 'thinking' when it came up with this? Leave a comment below if you like. Solving chess puzzles like this is probably good for your health as it keeps your brain active. Nobody wants something like early-onset Alzheimer's.
Solution
<| Book | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Website |>