Is the expert level of GnuBG even useful? Or is just that it sucks at simple end game problems?
I and my opponent both had two checkers left - I had one on the 5 and one on the 2 point, my opponent's both were on the 1 point. It's my turn, center cube. So it's hit or miss. I calculate I am a 19:17 favorite and doubled. After the game, GnuBG told me that was a mistake, despite agreeing that I was a favorite in that spot. But it somehow came to the conclusion that after me doubling and my opponent taking it, my opponent would become the favorite. I was confused, as that didn't make any sense to me. It was early in a 21 points match, and the score was close, so I didn't think that would have any impact - but I let GnuBG analyze it as a money game regardless. It told me No double, beaver would be the right move. Didn't make sense to me, and I don't see how beavering would change that simple of a problem, where beavering HAD to be bad imo. Still, deactivated beavers, GnuBG tells me it's no double, take, despite me being a favorite. I recalculated, and messaged two people about it, because it didn't make any sense to me. Finally I had the expert idea to change GnuBGs analysis level from the default expert to grandmaster. And there it was, the Double, take, that I had envisioned.
So why would expert level fail to get such a super simple problem right? I mean I have no doubt GnuBG is worlds better than I am even at the expert setting. But at what point does it become unreliable? Does it have a general weakness regarding endgame patterns?
(ascunde) Dacă vrei să fii la zi cu ultimele afişaje de pe tabelel de discuţii,poţi primii veşti la ştiri clienţi,făcând click pe logoul RSS de pe parte de sus a fiecărei table. (pauloaguia) (arată toate sfaturile)