Pulsar Chess Engine 4+
Multilevel Chess Program AI
Michael Adams
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- Free
Screenshots
Description
The Pulsar Chess Engine plays Chess and six variants all with multiple levels. The variants are Chess960, Crazyhouse, Loser's, Atomic, Three Checks and Giveaway. In addition, there is also a review mode to look at the user's log file with analysis available if the game is chess or chess960. 10 game collections of classic and modern games are also available to look at including Fischer, Carlsen and Morphy.
Pulsar In its regular play values mobility and active positions. In the app there is an article with more on its playing style and how to train against it. With the variants, each has its own style. Chess960, Three Checks and Crazyhouse are the more chess-like variants and adoptable to learn to play for anyone with interest. The rules of all games are in the app.
All games played that end with a result or resignation are logged. Users can open their log file in App on the game menu. If the game is a chess game or chess960, Crafty engine analysis is available. There are also now additional game collections to get when users open their log file as well of classic and modern master games.
Pulsar has levels of play from beginner too advanced. Games with a time control are the hardest though Pulsar doesn't call the player's time. The time is more to handicap Pulsar's strength, but users will have a clock and can see if it's gone negative if they want to play the time control.
The game button - new game menu item, lets the user control the variant and difficulty. It defaults to Chess at Easy(lowest level) but remembers the current settings when the App restarts. There are choices of pieces and board color schemes. The Pulsar Chess program was originally developed by me for computers starting in 1998 and came to mobile for the first time in 2014.
Pulsar's board is accessible to the blind using Voice Over, a screen reader. Tap on a square and it will say whats on it and double tap to move or choose from three move methods.
Pulsar began as a chess program and later learned variants. It ran extensively on two servers for many years both at chess and variants. The ratings on the board reflect strength I saw in rated play on handicapped bots. They are not 100% exact but generalizations I made from the various bots I ran at different settings.
If in the new game selector, Play vs. Computer is unchecked the user can move for both sides. This is to allow two people at same location to use the App as a board for a game and have the app enforce move legality and results for whatever variant is selected.
What’s New
Version 2.15
Fix for users current level choice increasing by one when exiting review mode by starting a game
Fix for crazyhouse pieces not being droppable from captured piece palette in review mode
added numbers 1-8 next to first eight level names
Fix for flickering in move animation in opening moves of timed games
App Privacy
The developer, Michael Adams, indicated that the app’s privacy practices may include handling of data as described below. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.
Data Not Collected
The developer does not collect any data from this app.
Privacy practices may vary based on, for example, the features you use or your age. Learn More
Information
- Seller
- Michael Adams
- Size
- 5.2 MB
- Category
- Games
- Compatibility
-
- iPhone
- Requires iOS 9.0 or later.
- iPad
- Requires iPadOS 9.0 or later.
- iPod touch
- Requires iOS 9.0 or later.
- Mac
- Requires macOS 10.15 or later.
- Apple Vision
- Requires visionOS 1.0 or later.
- Languages
-
English, French, German, Italian, Spanish
- Age Rating
- 4+
- Copyright
- © 2014-2024 Michael Ronald Adams
- Price
- Free