Big Brain Academy for Wii

Endless Ocean

Wii Chess

Wii Fit

Wii Music

Wii Sports

Animal Crossing: Let's go to the City

Trauma Center: New Blood

Trauma Center: Second Opinion

Wii Play

 

42 All Time Classics

Actionloop

Brain Training

Big Brain Academy

Cooking Guide

Electroplankton

Maths Training

More Brain Training

Nintendogs

Picross DS

Sudoku Master

Sight Training

Tetris DS

Animal Crossing

Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney

Elite Beat Agents

Harvest Moon DS

Hotel Dusk: Room 215

Magic Made Fun

Nintendo DS Browser

Nintendo MP3 Player

Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney

Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney: Justice for All

Professor Layton and the Curious Village

Puzzle League DS

Trauma Center: Under the Knife

 

CHECKMATE?

In Wii Chess you’ll have the chance to go head to head with one of the most advanced computer chess systems on the planet. As you battle to outwit the game’s artificial intelligence, you might find yourself asking exactly how your electronic opponent got to be so smart! Don’t worry though; losing out to a computer is nothing new. Check out our timeline below to see how the rise of artificial intelligence has signaled the downfall of many great players at the chess table.

 
1769 – In one of the great hoaxes of the time, inventor Wolfgang von Kempelen constructs a chess playing machine known as The Turk, which many believe to be a complex device capable of competing against the best chess players of the time. In fact, the machine houses a well-concealed operator who can see and control the game via a series of magnets. The clever construction of the machine keeps the secret of how it is operated safe for years after its first appearance. Among the notable opponents The Turk plays and defeats are Napoleon Bonaparte and Benjamin Franklin.

1958 – Building on years of research, the first computer programmes that can play a full game of chess are developed. Eight years later, the first chess match between two computer programmes takes place and lasts for 9 months, with the computer-generated moves being sent across the Atlantic via telegraph.

1967 – Mac Hack Six becomes the first chess computer programme to defeat a human opponent in tournament play. The following year, International Master David Levy bets that no chess computer will be able to win against him within the next decade but admits it won’t be long until artificial intelligence catches up with humans. In 1989 his prediction comes true when he loses heavily to chess computer Deep Thought.

1981 – The Mississippi State Championship is won by computer Cray Blitz. On the way to securing victory, Cray Blitz becomes the first computer to defeat a master in tournament play.

1996 – Legendary chess player and world champion Gary Kasparov defeats advanced computer system Deep Blue despite losing the first game in the match. One year later, however, Kasparov fails to repeat the feat in a rematch and becomes one of the most high profile players ever to lose to a computer.

2006 – Undisputed world champion Vladimir Kramnik becomes the latest top player to lose out to a computer when he is defeated by Deep Fritz.

 

Release Date

18.01.2008

Software Benefit

> Relaxation

> Learning

> Focus