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| Tags: active, defensive, piece, values |
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#1
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Assuming P=1,B=N=3,R=K=4.5,Q=9 as a "general" value
(which differ from teacher to teacher - I inserted an approximate power for the king but trying to exchange him isn't recommended :-) - how would you rate the pieces in attack and defense? E.g. a Q tied to defense wins no beauty contest. -- Hauke Reddmann :-EX8 Private For our chemistry workgroup,remove "math" from the address For spamming, remove anything else |
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#2
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On 3 Dec 2003 15:40:58 GMT, Hauke Reddmann
wrote: Assuming P=1,B=N=3,R=K=4.5,Q=9 as a "general" value (which differ from teacher to teacher - I inserted an approximate power for the king but trying to exchange him isn't recommended :-) - how would you rate the pieces in attack and defense? E.g. a Q tied to defense wins no beauty contest. Values in chess, generally tend to undermine the idea of tactics and sometimes strategy, and possibly even planning for a game I feel. Rating chess pieces is irrelevent I feel, and is no substitute for a sound, economical plan. __ __OGONEKO |
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