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It is astonishing how the author has managed to find so many games that exhibit uncanny similarities between Kasparov and his predecessors, which makes the content of the book extremely plausible – as if Kasparov himself were writing it. The book also serves as a highly instructive, practical chess book – to beat Kasparov, the greatest player of all time, took some pretty special chess, and readers will enjoy learning from this.
#Kasparov chess style plus#
In gently humorous – but chessically serious – style, the author imagines Kasparov is annotating over 70 of his own lost games, and blaming all these defeats on the bad influence of each of the previous world champions, providing in-depth analysis to show how he was misled by them. The human plus machine style of play is called Freestyle (often played online) and the rules of the game allow chess players to consult outside sources - books, other humans and most importantly computerized chess engines that are stocked with the moves and results of thousands or millions of chess games that have been played through the years. It is famous for its positional style and the ability to build strong defenses. As a reaction to this wonderful series of books, leading chess writer Tibor Károlyi has written this imaginary sixth volume. With Houdini 6, Kasparov Chess is very good and clever shell.
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The series is called ”My Great Predecessors”. Over the past few years the great chess player Garry Kasparov has written five best-selling books praising the contributions to chess made by the previous world champions.