top | item 35576228

(no title)

sithlord | 2 years ago

that doesn't matter, you have every bit of information from the board to in theory know every possible outcome. It's not like the opponent can't sneak an extra piece in behind your line. Or randomly turn your rook into their queen...

discuss

order

charcircuit|2 years ago

>in theory know every possible outcome

Does your theory model the maximum possible compute of a player and the amount of time they have to spend computing these outcomes on a turn? People have a finite amount of time to make moves or they lose. Even computers can't explore the full search space.

Trivializing the combinatorial explosion of each move is not useful for a chess strategy.