![]() ![]() I started making a list of my candidate moves. When I saw this, I wanted to know if I was missing something. What does that even mean? Are there no better (only equal/"alternative") moves? Take the reference game and look at the report for the move 9.Re1. I'll edit this post with a link to the original forum soon. Because after all, those of us not pros, would like to improve. Is it always, more often than not, less often, or about the same?Ĭontext is related to the OP and using analysis on chessdotcom.īy analysis, I'm also referring to the game reports. You can get to crucial positions instead of wondering what the best lines are. You can use any engine with any database with any user interface, some of them free, some not (like Chessbase, which is arguably the best, but not free at all). Regarding databases: These have nothing to do with engines. You can set the search depth, the number of threads, the size of the hash tables, the endgame tablebases. If you use Stockfish on your local computer, you'll be able to tweak the resource usage and everything else to your liking. You can just download a free version of Stockfish. If anyone has any suggestions on engines with features that I can't already access or if there is something that I'm completely missing then I would like to hear them. I've heard that stockfish also comes with a database, same thing, has about 3,000,000 games in their database and what about chessbase with 8,000,000. I do agree but take stockfish, its main feature is the analysis function but you can access good analysis even here on so why would I download stockfish when I can simply use it from a website. Everyone says engines are great for improving and that you should definitely consider buying one.
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