Comment by tromp

8 months ago

While its performance against humans is very impressive indeed, its performance against engines is somewhat less so:

> Our agent’s aggressive style is highly successful against human opponents and achieves a grandmasterlevel Lichess Elo of 2895. However, we ran another instance of the bot and allowed other engines to play it. Its estimated Elo was far lower, i.e., 2299. Its aggressive playing style does not work as well against engines that are adept at tactical calculations, particularly when there is a tactical refutation to a suboptimal move.

I like this even more that I’ve read that. That sounds like it makes this agent a much more human-like player than the perfect calculator traditional chess engines. It may end up being more fun for humans to play against if it’s strong but has holes in its play.

This sounds a lot like Mikhail Tal!

  • Not really. Mikhail Tal was easily one of the strongest calculators in chess history. Definitely the strongest in his time besides maybe Fischer.

    The idea that Tal mostly made dubious sacrifices is largely a myth heavily based in a joke he himself made. In actual fact he always did deep calculation and knew that no easy refutation existed, and that he had a draw by perpetual check in hand(until beaten by Ding a few years ago, Tal actually had the record streak of unbeaten games in classical chess). He was making calculated risks knowing his opponents would not be likely to outcalculate him. He also had a very deep understanding of positional play, he just had a very different style of expressing it, relying more on positional knowledge to create sharp positions centered around material imbalance.