Contemplate this 'KRBNP vs kqp' mate in three chess problem generated autonomously by a computer using the DSNS computational creativity method. It does not use endgame tablebases, artificial neural networks, machine learning or any kind of typical AI. The chess board is a virtually limitless canvas for the expression of creative ideas (even by computer). Depending on the type and complexity of the problem desired, a single instance of Chesthetica running on a desktop computer can probably generate anywhere between one and ten problems per hour. This position contains a total of eight 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 3
Chesthetica v12.58 (Selangor, Malaysia)
Generated on 21 Jul 2022 at 8:37:26 AM
Chess puzzles are ancient. Some are over a thousand years old but only in the 21st century have computers been able to compose original ones on their own like humans can. White has a slight material advantage over Black. Try to solve this as quickly as you can. If you like it, please share with others. Over time, the tactics you see in these puzzles will help you improve your game. If you'd like to learn something interesting about computer chess problem composition, consider this.
A Similar Chess Problem by Chesthetica: 01396
Solution
<| Book | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Website |>