An easy way to play and train chess on your PC
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Lucas Chess Guides by bru888 (new)
- Play
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- Tools
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Lichess puzzles, by ECO by Scott
How to Analyze Your Chess Game Using Lucas Chess by ProjectResolute
FAQ by bolokay
Summary of game modes by Mike Eddies
The second generation of playing personalities in LC by Michele Tumbarello
Advanced info in LC by Michele Tumbarello
Guide to Lucas Chess on Devtome by thirdrenaissance
Learning Openings Thoroughly With Lucas Chess by PossibleOatmeal
A Great Hidden Feature in Lucas Chess by PossibleOatmeal
Le jeu d’échecs avec Lucas par Eric (new)
Installer/Créer un répertoire Polyglot — Analyse d’une base de parties par Max Aloyau
Robinson spécial jeux gratuits — Lucas Chess par Rob Robinson
Bonus, Spectateurs (Kibitzers), bases de données, Challenge 101 & Passerelles. par Max Aloyau
17 questions utiles par Max Aloyau prolongement et correction de la traduction par Gilles Badufle de la FAQ rédigée par bolokay
Mise en Route, Configuration, PGN/FNS & Utilisateurs par Max Aloyau
Palette graphique et raccourcis des options par Max Aloyau
Comment utiliser Lucas Chess : Jouer et s’entraîner par Gilles Badufle (web)
Exercices de l’ UNED, Guirlande & Lave-linge par Max Aloyau
Transsibérien Express & Expédition vers l’Everest par Max Aloyau.
Un dossier d’AIDE par Gilles Badufle
Etude approfondie des ouvertures — Une fonction importante & Tournois des moteurs. par Max Aloyau
Jouer comme un GM depuis un PGN — Compte rendu d’analyses — Elo LICHESS par Max Aloyau (updated)
Deutsche Bedienungsanleitung für Lucas Schach by Bernhard
Instrukcja do Lucas Chess v.2a przez Andrew KalQlator(updated)
Guia rápida de referencia por Raúl Giorgi
Tutorial El ajedrez de Lucas (1) — crear y guardar partidas por Jorge Barón (Ajedrez
escolar)
Tutorial El ajedrez de Lucas (2) — Abrir bases de datos y contestar preguntas por Jorge Barón (Canal en YouTube)
Abrir y guardar partidas en formato pgn por Jorge Barón (Escuela de ajedrez / Club de ajedrez iberCaja)
Contact: lukasmonk at gmail
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Lucas Chess сосредоточены на игре против компьютера с увеличением уровня сложности и ограниченным количество подсказок, которые даются преподавателем. Так же в программу добавлены тысячи тренировочных позиций типа разных типов завершения игры, тактические комбинации и задачи (мат в 2, 3, 4 и т.д ходов). Компьютер использует различные шахматные движки. Игрок начинает играть против самого простого движка и постепенно качество и мастерство искуственного интеллекта растёт и подстраивается под игрока для помощи в оттачивании навыков игры в шахматы. Даже если игрок начнёт побеждать на самом сложном уровне игры, то компьютер просто переключится автоматически на более навороченный шахматный движок.
Более подробная информация о Lucas Chess на официальном сайте…
Note: This article was originally published on April 9th, 2015 on chess.com
Studying openings is, for some reason, a very controversial subject online these days. I feel strongly that learning a solid, consistent opening repertoire is part of becoming a strong chess player. Some will tell you to ignore openings until you are (variously) 1600, 1800, or even 2000. I’ve even seen one person say not to touch them until you are a master. To me, this is just silliness. I’m not going to get into that topic here, but suffice it to say, you should be learning openings.
Your first step should be to select a system to learn and grab some detailed resources about it. For my example here, I have selected the Hyper-accelerated Dragon (Sicilian) system and the book Chess Openings for Black Explained. The resource you choose should have recommended moves, of course, but should also include as much detail about why the moves are being played and what plans are being acted upon and should be put into action for the middle game as possible. A simple tree of variations is not really enough to learn a system for most people.
For this article, I am focusing on one of my favorite under-rated pieces of chess software Lucas Chess. Within Lucas Chess, if you go to Tools, Openings, Personal Opening Guide, you will find an excellent tool for organizing your opening repertoire.
First create a new opening with the «New» button on the top toolbar. For this, I named mine «Black — Hyper-Accelerated Dragon (CO4BE).» Next, go through your resource slowly, taking notes as you go. Make a tree of variations by making moves on the board. Make comments, annotate moves, mark positional evaluations, etc.
You can draw on the board by using the «Director» feature (right click on the chessboard’s border and choose Director). This visual annotation really helps me, but I also include a text explanation.
Now, I have gone through an entire chapter of the book, inputting a tree of opening choices along with lots of notes and evaluations. I see many people recommending that that is all that you do, if that. «Don’t memorize lines!» they say. Nonsense. Even after I did all of that, if someone sat down and played the white side against me, I would be clueless. You have to study something to truly learn it. Imagine yourself in a tournament 3 months from now needing to recall the information in this chapter. Not happening without study and practice. Luckily, Lucas Chess makes this pretty painless.
Click the «Training» button near the top right. There are lots of options here which you can explore, but here is what I do, and it works great. First, click «black» for the «Play with» option, because this is an opening you are learning for black. Next, we are going to limit the depth we start with for practice. I recommend a value of 19 (odd numbers work best for black, even numbers work best for white). So, change depth to 19. For name, I also just call it 19. Click accept, and we are ready to start practicing.
Exit the Personal Opening Guide feature of Lucas Chess and go to Training, Learn Tactics by Repetition. From here, find the opening you are studying, and select it. Each different training depth (you just created one for depth 19, next you can move it up to 21, etc.) will appear here. Select the one you want (here, we just have 19 to choose from). Click «New» to create a new training session. Select manual configuration and ignore all the options except «Blocks» near the middle left. Change the «Order» from original to random and click Accept. Now, try to recall the correct moves from the chapter for black. If you make a mistake, you can finish the line, but you will have to do it again immediately afterwards. It will work its way through all the possible lines you have entered. Once you are done, you can see how you did. The important stats are «Working Time» and «Errors.» Just keep creating new training sessions (New, Copy configuration from current register) and practicing until you get your «Errors» down to 0 and your time down to whatever threshhold you want to set for yourself. Here’s an example:
You have completed the first stage of learning your repertoire. What I do next is go back to the Personal Opening Guide and create another training module at depth 21. It will appear right under your 19 depth module under Training, Learn Tactics by Repetition. Practice that one until you get your errors down and your time down and move on to a deeper level. Eventually, you will be able to do it in your sleep.
The final step before implementing the system in actual games is to go back and re-read the chapter. You should feel much more comfortable with the positions and moves since you have commited the whole thing to memeory. During this and subsequent read-throughs, concentrate on the hows and whys the book is presenting. My experience is I understand so much more at this point than the first read-through.
Don’t forget to come back to this opening and run-through the variations periodically to keep them fresh in your mind!
Welcome to the Wiki for Lucas Chess, the most flexible and powerful chess software for Windows and Linux created by Lucas Monge. Lucas chess is completely free and open source.
Check out the key features here!
A personal favourite is the function Find best move which let’s you make custom trainings from the mistakes in your games.
A snapshot of Lucas Chess
As of 2022, Lucas Chess is fully up to date and a must have for the improving Chess player.
The goal of this Wiki is to show the world which amazing functions are hidden in Lucas Chess.
Downloads
This is the official project homepage: https://lucaschess.pythonanywhere.com/home
Here you can download the latest version: https://lucaschess.pythonanywhere.com/downloads
All source code is available on Github: https://github.com/lukasmonk/lucaschessR2
If you would like to contribute, please create a user account and send an email to [contribute at chessionate dot com]