
Freestyling – between Formula One and Advanced Chess
Before the 3rd PAL/CSS Freestyle Tournament on June 16-18
The only, but important change in the 3rd Freestyle Tournament concerns thinking
time: instead of 45 minutes basic time and 5 seconds increment per move each
or team, this time the participants get 60 minutes and 15 seconds. This change
turned out necessary and useful in order to lessen the time pressure on the
centaurs (that’s the term for the combination human/machine) in their duels
with the standalone engines. We expect that the change will benefit the quality
of the game.
As reported earlier, the main round of the 2nd Freestyle tournament in March
was won by a pure engine player named Varkey, who sensationally took
7,5 out of 8 with his Rybka chess engine. Most of the 30 title holders,
among them some prominent players, had failed to qualify for the finals. In
the end it was the sponsor of the Hydra project, Zorchamp from
the United Arab Emirates, who took the overall tournament victory.
CCGM Arno Nickel, alias Ciron [Foto; Hans-Walter Schmitt]
So, who or what stands behind the player handles? One of the participants,
the Berlin Correspondence Grandmaster Arno Nickel alias Ciron,
took a peek behind the curtains of secrecy that usually surrounds these events.
Arno thinks Freestyling is a great new field for experiments, located
somewhere between Advanced Chess on the one hand and some sort of Formula
One chess sport on the other.
The kick of playing
Usually losers don’t show much enthusiasm after a tournament. But this is
different in a Freestyle tournament. Apparently the biggest kick is
got out of just playing in it! It is like a virus, affecting everyone, who
ever throws himself into such a battle. “Please, do it again!” is the main
message of participants after the event. “We did not have a chance, but we
enjoyed it tremendously”. It is about being able to use a chess engine in a
tournament game of chess, not worrying about making a fool of oneselves, putting
up a fight against the strongest opponent. This is a new form of chess sport
for the 21st century.

The brains behind Rybka: IMs Vasik Rajlich and Iweta Radzievicz
We are still in a stage of experimenting, looking for the right forms of tournaments,
thinking times and playing rules. Perhaps it is this aspect – together with
the high prize fund of course – the appeal of the pioneering spirit that attracts
more and more players. Which direction Freestyling develops will depend
on these present experiments. In the 1st PAL/CSS Freestyle Tournament 2005
the pendulum swung in favour of the Advanced Chess players, and three
Fide grandmasters made it to the semi-finals. In the second tournament this
year we saw the engines dominating, with operators not intervening at all during
the game (like the winner Vigi Varkey) or playing the role of a co-ordinator
and a critical user of various engines according. That is what we must assume
for this year’s Freestyle Champion Zorchamp, who did not rely completely
on the massively parallel hardware configuration of Hydra, which is
widely considered to be the world’s strongest chess computer. Zorchamp,
who for many years now has been a well-known figure on playchess.com,
and is well respected for his excellent knowledge and skills in computer chess
(which includes creating his own opening books), played as a centaur.
Final standing of the 2nd PAL/CSS Freestyle Tournament

Dual machines and 64 bit programs
This year, because of the faster rate of play, powerful hardware became even
more important than in 2005. At least in the finals we may assume that the
most players used one or more dual machines. The most successful engine of
the 2nd PAL/CSS Freestyle Tournament, Rybka, has a 64 bit version, which
on a 64-bit system is about 30-40 percent faster than the regular 32 bit version.
Vigi Varkey won the main tournament using the 32 bit version, but “upgraded”
his Rybka for the finals to a 64 bit version. In the end it did not help him,
as his opponents was well prepared for the Indian programmer, who lives in
London. Instead the two other Rybka engines, Relic and King
Crusher, had the edge in the finals.
Behind Relic, who had to win the tie-breaks in order to qualify but
then surprisingly took the third place in the finals, stands Darren DiAlfonso
from New Jersey (USA), a programmer (but not for chess). Björn Osterman
from Sweden, playing with the handle King Crusher, is an experienced
chess engine expert with far more than 10,000 games on the chess server.

IM Vasik Rajlich, author of Rybka and part of the "Rajlich"
team
A look into the “black box”
As the player’s handles on the server do not tell you very much about the
configuration, people are curious to get some information about runner-up Rajlich.
After 15 games the author of the Rybka program was the only participant
who remained undefeated in the tournament. This was not because Rajlich
used a special version of his program, but because it had the the strongest
chess team: two International Masters, Vasik Rajlich and Iweta Radziewicz,
and one top grandmaster, Michal Krasenkov. You need only read Krasenkov’s
comments and analysis to the game Zorchamp-Rajlich in the download links
below to understand that the Rajlich Team operated quite professionally and
managed most successful to avoid excessively risky play. In the end just a
few working victories helped the team to win second place and $4,000 dollars.
Our comments in an earlier article, stating that not even one grandmaster made
it up to the finals has to be corrected, after we get to know about Vasik
Rajlich’s team: at least one under-cover grandmaster succeeded...

The other half of "Rajlich": IM Iweta Radzievicz of Poland
We have another annotated game, presented from International Master Dennis
Breder alias Klosterfrau. Analysing his unlucky loss to Relic
in the last round he describes how difficult it has been in this tournament
for Advanced Chess players to proper convert advantages and avoid time
trouble. This loss cost the first league player from the Godesberger SK
$2,000, as he failed to make third place. Dennis Breder, too, did not
play alone, but enjoyed support from Jana Samorukova. If you compare
the openings of the Advanced Chess players and the pure engine players,
you might come to the same conclusion, that there are many differences in the
choice of the concrete lines. Just take a look to the original game Rajlich-Klosterfrau
1.Nf3 d5 2.d4 c6 3.c4 e6 4.e3 f5 and - 5.g4!?).

IM Dennis Breder und Jana Samorukova
All records with respect to the size of a team were broken by the Czech team
Equidistance. Four players and six computers stood behind this name:
Patrik Schoupal, Miroslav Kvicala, Jan Macura and Frantisek Nepustil,
all have international ratings (and two are active correspondence players).
But it is hardly surprising that such a complicated co-ordination bears brings
with it the great danger of permanent time trouble. That was not mitigated
by a detailed opening book, containing many special variations, as e.g. in
the Sicilian Morra Gambit. The team of Patrik Schoupal did already
show its strength qualifying to the finals. Schoupal predicts that not more
than one standalone engine will qualify for the finals in the 3rd PAL/CSS Freestyle
Tournament, that due to the longer thinking time. If he should be right this
would perfectly fit to the idea of freestyling, as it lives from human
participation as opposed to pure computer events.
Last but not least, here is some information about my own team Ciron. I
played together with a good friend who covers some areas and has some special
skills. Silvo Lahtela is an excellent blitz and rapid player who under
the handle Randori regularly plays on the Playchess server, with
an Elo between 2400 und 2600. Until now he had nothing to do with computer
chess or correspondence chess, which are my domains. During the period of preparation
for the tournament we had a strict division of labour. Nevertheless we also
did suffer from time trouble in some games, and we are still looking for the
ideal form of co-operation.
Links
We bring you two databases for download:
- All 587 games of the 2nd PAL/CSS
Freestyle Tournament (in ChessBase/Fritz format)
- 64 selected games from this event
(five annotated games included). Readers should please suggest up to 3 Freestyle
games for brilliancy prizes and send an e-mail to redaktion@computerschach.de
until May 31. If you prefer one of the games, which are not in the smaller
database, that is also okay. The results of the readers choice will be published
some days before the start of the 3rd PAL/CSS Freestyle Tournament on June
16-18.
3rd PAL/CSS Freestyle Tournament
What is Freestyle Chess?
In a normal chess tournament there are very strict rules about what you can
do or not do during a game. Certainly enlisting outside help – from a human
or a computer – is one of the more serious transgressions. In Freestyle Chess
everything is allowed. The players are expected to work in teams or with computers.
There are no restrictions. Use Fritz or Deep Shredder, consult openings books
or chess Informants, call Anand or Karpov and ask for help, if you know them
well enough.
When and where?
The third PAL/CSS Freestyle Tournament will be played on the
two weekends: June 16–18 and July 14–16, 2006. It consists
of a main tournament, in which everyone can participate, and the final
phase in which the eight top scorers play a round robin tournament for
the title and their share of the US $16,000 prize fund. Full
details of the schedule and prize fund are given below.
All games are played on the Internet, in a special room on the Playchess
server. Participants need to have an account on the server, which
is free for the duration of the tournament. If you are not already a
member of this giant Internet community (with over 100,000 active members)
you can download the software at Playchess.com
and set up an account within minutes.
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Prize fund
The total prize fund is US $16,000 and has been provided by the PAL Group
in the United Arab Emirates, the company that is behind the Hydra
chess project. The prize money is divided as follows:
1st prize: US $8,000 2nd prize: US $4,000 3rd prize: US $2,000 4th to 8th
prize: Software and books 9th to 16th prize: Software and books
There are special bonus prizes (e.g. for the most beautiful games) that will
be distributed during the tournament. Details will be provided when the number
and make-up of the participants is known.
Registration
The entry fee for the PAL/CSS Freestyle Tournament is 10 Euro (= US
$12.00). This is paid when you register for the tournament. Late entries can
pay an increased fee of 30 Euro in Playchess "ducats" (electronic
money) on the day of the main tournament.
There is no entry fee for GMs and IMs with bona fide Playchess accounts.
These players need to provide proof of their identity before the tournament
starts. A title account on Playchess (with a King or Queen symbol) is sufficient,
since it has been validated by ChessBase. Otherwise you will be asked to fax
a copy of your passport or ID card to the organisers.
To register for the Freestyle Tournament you need to fill out a registry form
(the link is given below), giving your name, address and Playchess handle.
Some days before the tournament starts you will receive an email with further
details.
Schedule of PAL/CSS Freestyle Tournament
All times given in the following schedule are in Central European Summer Time
(CEST), which is used in most European countries, e.g. Germany, France, Spain,
Italy, Scandinavia, etc. CEST is GMT + two hours. For instance 14:00h (or 2
p.m.) CEST is 12:00h GMT and translates to 13:00h London, 8 a.m. New York and
4 p.m. Moscow. Click on the times given in the schedule below to convert
to your local time.
Important note: you will need to log in with your correct handle not
later than ten minutes before the start of each round. Anyone who is not present
in the chess server room at this time can not be guarantied to participate
in this round.
Main Tournament – eight round Swiss
Time controls are 60 minutes for all the moves plus a 15 second increment
per move. The event is a classical Swiss. The top eight players will qualify
for the finals. If tie-breaks are needed these will be played on Saturday,
June 24, 2006, at 14:00h
CEST.
Main Tournament (Friday-Sunday, June 16-18, 2006 |
Round 1 |
Friday, 16.06.2006 |
17:00h
CEST |
Round 2 |
Friday, 16.06.2006 |
20:00h
CEST |
Round 3 |
Saturday, 17.06.2006 |
14:00h
CEST |
Round 4 |
Saturday, 17.06.2006 |
17:00h
CEST |
Round 5 |
Saturday, 17.06.2006 |
20:00h
CEST |
Round 6 |
Sunday, 18.06.2006 |
14:00h
CEST |
Round 7 |
Sunday, 18.06.2006 |
17:00h
CEST |
Round 8 |
Sunday, 18.06.2006 |
20:00h
CEST |
Participants in the main tournament must be in the playing hall ten minutes
before the start of each round.
Finale – Round robin tournament ("all play all")
Time controls are 60 minutes for all the moves plus a 15 second increment
per move. Each player plays one game against every other player. If tie-breaks
are needed these will be played on the same day, after the regular games have
finished.
Participants in the finale must be in the playing hall ten minutes before
the start of each round.
The winner of the finals gets the first prize of US $8,000 and the
title of "Third PAL/CSS Freestyle Chess Champion". The runner-up
gets $4,000, the third place gets $2,000. There will be special
software prizes for the places 4-8. Registration
for the tournament
Reports on previous Freestyle Tournaments
Zor-Champ
wins Freestyle Tournament
16.04.2006
In
a very exciting final the team of Zor-Champ, located in the United
Arab Emirates, took first place and the $8,000 prize money in the Second
PAL/CSS Freestyle Tournament. The team was driven by the program Hydra,
which runs on multi-processor speical-purpose hardware. Second was
IM Vasik Rajlich, assisted by his own program Rybka. Report
and games.
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Freestyle
tournament: Finals this weekend
03.04.2006
After
tiebreak matches the eight qualifiers of the Second PAL/CSS Freestyle
Chess Tournament are ready to battle it out for the $16,000 prize fund.
At the faster time controls this time four pure engines made it to
the final round. You can come and watch the action at 14:00h CEST on
Saturday and Sunday, when the tournament director says: Gentlemen,
start your engines.
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Freestyle
tournament: Vvarkey wins with 7.5/8
24.03.2006
The
first leg of the second PAL/CSS Freestyle Chess Tournament, which carries
a prize fund of $16,000, was won by an unknown player with the Playchess
handle Vvarkey. He scored 7.5 points from 8 games (before the last
round his score was 7/7). Six other players qualified for the final
behind him. For the final, eighth place there will be a tiebreak tournament
tomorrow. Details.
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Freestyle
tournament: advice from an expert
16.03.2006
Are
you one of the over 150 participants that have registered for the second
$16,000 PAL/CSS Freestyle Chess Tournament, starting this weekend? Do
you have your computer assistant or your GM advisor booted up and ready
to play? For novices in computer assisted play we have some tips and
tricks by correspondence
chess GM Arno Nickel.
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The
$16,000 open-to-all chess tournament
28.02.2006
Would
you like to play in a grandmaster tournament? From your home and for
a substantial prize fund? With a guarantee that you will not disgrace
yourself? Then think about joining the second PAL/CSS Freestyle
Chess Tournament, where anything goes. Where computer assistance
is not forbidden, but is positively encouraged. Full
details.
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Dark
horse ZackS wins Freestyle Chess Tournament
19.06.2005
The
computer-assisted PAL/CSS Freestyle Chess Tournament, staged on Playchess.com,
ended with a shock win by two amateurs: Steven Cramton, 1685 USCF and
Zackary Stephen, 1398 USCF, using three computers for analysis, defeated
teams of strong grandmasters all the way to victory in the finals.
We bring you a first flash
report with games and results.
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Scintillating
chess in the PAL-CSS Freestyle tournament
15.06.2005
This
unusual event, in which players may use computer assistance during
the games, is turning into a milestone experiment. After the main event
and the quarter-finals (and with four players left) we can draw first
tentative conclusions. One is that the most powerful chess playing
entity on the planet is a
GM armed with a computer.
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Hydra
misses the quarter-finals of Freestyle tournament
11.06.2005
It
was the shocker of the event: the massive Hydra machines, running on
16 and 32 processors and special FPGA chess hardware were both knocked
out in the main section of the Freestyle chess tournament. On the other
hand a dark horse named ZackS qualified with consummate ease. Today
there will be tie-breaks, tomorrow the quarter-finals. Come
and watch...
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Eleven
qualify for main Freestyle Tournament
31.05.2005
48
players from 20 different countries got together on the Playchess server
last weekend to play in the PAL/CSS Freestyle Chess Tournament. Using
computer assistance, which is not forbidden in Freestyle, eleven qualified
for the main tournament starting on Friday. There they will have to
battle it out with scores of computer-assisted
GMs.
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The
$20,000 free-for-all chess tournament
24.05.2005
Like
to play in a grandmaster tournament? From your home and for a substantial
prize fund? With a guarantee that you will not disgrace yourself? Then
think about joining the first PAL/CSS Freestyle Chess Tournament, where
anything goes. Where computer assistance is not forbidden, it is positively
encouraged. Here are all
the details.
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Freestyle
tournament for $20,000
09.05.2005
It's
a new kind of chess tournament, with a substantial prize fund. $20,000
in all, $10,000 for the winner. Top grandmaster conditions. But with
a difference. In the PAL/CSS Freestyle Chess Tournament on the Playchess.com
server anyone can play. Even you. And anything goes. Anything!
(In fact computer assistance is encouraged). Here
are the details.
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Anyone
– or anything – can play!
07.08.2004
Anything
goes in our freestyle tournament on the Playchess.com
server this Saturday, August 7th. Participants can use computers, visiting
grandmasters, slime beings from other planets – whatever they want.
The games start at 15:00h server time (GMT +2), time controls are 7
min + 2 sec/move.
Watch the fun...
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Freestyle
Blitz Tournament August 7
25.07.2004
Winning
Internet chess games with the assistance of computers is quite despicable.
People who are caught get stripped of rights and privileges. Not so
in the August 7th "Freestyle Tournament" on Playchess.com. There you
can use anything you want to win your games. Details...
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