Magellan

Ferdinand Magellan [1]
Magellan,
a chess program by Karl Pevny, written in C for a program size of only 64 KiB running under MS-DOS [2].
Magellan competed at the WMCCC 1993 in Munich, and gained respectable 4 out of 9 points [3].
Selected Games
WMCCC 1993, round 9, Magellan - Gandalf
[Event "WMCCC 1993"] [Site "Munich, Germany"] [Date "1993.11.07"] [Round "9"] [White "Magellan"] [Black "Gandalf"] [Result "1/2-1/2"] 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Nf6 4.Ng5 d5 5.exd5 Nd4 6.d6 Bg4 7.Bxf7+ Kd7 8.f3 Bf5 9.Bb3 Nh5 10.h4 Ng3 11.Rh2 Nxb3 12.axb3 Ke8 13.Ne4 Bxe4 14.fxe4 Qf6 15.d7+ Kd8 16.Qf3 Qf4 17.Nc3 Qxf3 18.gxf3 Nh5 19.d3 Bd6 20.Ke2 Ng3+ 21.Kf2 Nh5 22.Be3 a6 23.Nb5 Bb4 24.c3 Be7 25.Na3 Kxd7 26.Nc4 Ke6 27.d4 exd4 28.cxd4 Rhf8 29.d5+ Kd7 30.Ra5 g6 31.e5 Rad8 32.Bg5 Bxg5 33.hxg5 Rf4 34.e6+ Kc8 35.Ke3 Rdf8 36.Rh3 Kd8 37.Rc5 R4f5 38.Na5 Kc8 39.Nc4 Kd8 40.Ke4 Rf4+ 41.Ke3 R4f5 42.Na5 Kc8 43.Nc4 Kd8 44.Ke4 Rf4+ 45.Ke3 1/2-1/2
See also
External Links
Chess Program
Misc
- Ferdinand Magellan from Wikipedia
- Ferdinand Magellan Railcar from Wikipedia
- Strait of Magellan from Wikipedia
References
- ↑ An anonymous portrait of Ferdinand Magellan, 16th or 17th century (The Mariner's Museum Collection, Newport News, VA), Wikimedia Commons
- ↑ World Microcomputer Championships by Stefan Hahndel, rec.games.chess, November 8, 1993
- ↑ Magellan's ICGA Tournaments