Mephisto+MM+V

a dedicated chess computer module for Mephisto module systems by Hegener & Glaser launched in 1990 as successor of the Mephisto MM IV with the same hardware. Ed Schröder's Rebel program ran on a 65C02 [|CMOS] processor in 32 KiB ROM with 8 KiB RAM at 5 MHz, but gained 70 Elo over its predecessor and was tactically much stronger since it could solve deep combinations, while only doing 500-600 nodes per second, due to searching all check giving moves in the first at least two plies of the quiescence search, and even deeper if check evasion had only one or two legal moves. || toc =See also=
 * Home * Engines * Mephisto * MM V**
 * [[image:Mephisto-MMV.jpg width="260" link="http://rebel13.nl/dedicated/mm5.html"]] ||~ || **Mephisto MM V**,
 * Mephisto MM V ||~ ||^ ||
 * Mephisto MM II
 * Mephisto MM IV
 * Mephisto Polgar
 * Mephisto Rebell
 * Mephisto RISC
 * Rebel

=External Links=
 * [|Rebel's ICGA Tournaments]
 * [|Mephisto MMV] from [|Rebel Pure Nostalgica] by Ed Schröder
 * [|Back to the 80's with UCI] by Ed Schröder » UCI
 * [|Module MM V] from The Spacious Mind
 * [|The MM-V Machine at the World Championschip, Portorose, 1989] by Hans van Mierlo, [|ChessEval], February 09, 2014 » WMCCC 1989
 * [|Mephisto MM V] by [|Tom Luif]
 * [|Mephisto MM V] from [|Schachcomputer.info Wiki] (German)

=References= =What links here?= include page="Mephisto MM V" component="backlinks" limit="40"
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