Bruce Moreland made an analysis of those hard positions [7] : The suite contains eleven positions:
Nolot #1 bm Nxh6
Nolot #2 bm Rxc5
Nolot #3 bm Nxg5
This one seems to work, but I don't think that anyone has ever gotten a big score.
This one is correct, but whether or not you find it could be a matter of luck. You might start out with a negative score, but you should get a score of +3 or so if you search long enough.
I don't think that anyone has ever solved this one.
Nolot #4 bm Nxe6
Nolot #5 bm e5
Nolot #6 bm ... axb
This one also seems to work, but I don't know that anyone has gotten a big score.
Deep Thought got > +3 in four hours. I've gotten +5 in 93 hours. So this one is correct and extremely difficult.
I don't think that anyone has ever solved this.
Nolot #7 bm Rxd8
Nolot #8 bm Bxh7
Nolot #9 bm Ng5
This one is hard but works. I've gotten +2 in 37 hours.
Hsu expresses doubt about this one, but mine returned a score of +1 after a day. I don't know whether the key move wins or not.
I don't think that anyone has ever found the key.
Nolot #10 bm Rxf7
Nolot #11 bm Rxh6
This one is easy. Rxf7 should come back at +1 pretty quickly. I don't know if anyone has done better than this.
This one seems to be pretty easy to find, with a draw score or a score that is a little positive or negative, depending upon the program.
So 3, 6, and 9 are monsters and remain unsolved, if they aren't actually broken. 1, 4, and 10 are solvable, but the scores haven't been convincing yet. 11 is also findable, but it seems that the best result is a draw, so don't expect a big positive score. 8 is also solvable, but it might be found due to speculation. 2, 5, and 7 are known to be findable as wins.
r3qb1k/1b4p1/p2pr2p/3n4/Pnp1N1N1/6RP/1B3PP1/1B1QR1K1 w - - bm Nxh6; id "Position 1";
r4rk1/pp1n1p1p/1nqP2p1/2b1P1B1/4NQ2/1B3P2/PP2K2P/2R5 w - - bm Rxc5; id "Position 2";
r2qk2r/ppp1b1pp/2n1p3/3pP1n1/3P2b1/2PB1NN1/PP4PP/R1BQK2R w KQkq - bm Nxg5; id "Position 3";
r1b1kb1r/1p1n1ppp/p2ppn2/6BB/2qNP3/2N5/PPP2PPP/R2Q1RK1 w kq - bm Nxe6; id "Position 4";
r2qrb1k/1p1b2p1/p2ppn1p/8/3NP3/1BN5/PPP3QP/1K3RR1 w - - bm e5; id "Position 5";
rnbqk2r/1p3ppp/p7/1NpPp3/QPP1P1n1/P4N2/4KbPP/R1B2B1R b kq - bm axb5; id "Position 6";
1r1bk2r/2R2ppp/p3p3/1b2P2q/4QP2/4N3/1B4PP/3R2K1 w k - bm Rxd8+; id "Position 7";
r3rbk1/ppq2ppp/2b1pB2/8/6Q1/1P1B3P/P1P2PP1/R2R2K1 w - - bm Bxh7+; id "Position 8";
r4r1k/4bppb/2n1p2p/p1n1P3/1p1p1BNP/3P1NP1/qP2QPB1/2RR2K1 w - - bm Ng5; id "Position 9";
r1b2rk1/1p1nbppp/pq1p4/3B4/P2NP3/2N1p3/1PP3PP/R2Q1R1K w - - bm Rxf7; id "Position 10";
r1b3k1/p2p1nP1/2pqr1Rp/1p2p2P/2B1PnQ1/1P6/P1PP4/1K4R1 w - - bm Rxh6; id "Position 11";
Table of Contents
A test-suite created by Pierre Nolot, in 1994 introduced by Marc-François Baudot [1] [2] in rec.games.chess.
Discussion and Results
The suite was widely discussed in the news groups by Feng-hsiung Hsu [3] [4], Steven Edwards [5] [6] and others.Bruce's Analysis
Bruce Moreland made an analysis of those hard positions [7] :The suite contains eleven positions:
So 3, 6, and 9 are monsters and remain unsolved, if they aren't actually broken.
1, 4, and 10 are solvable, but the scores haven't been convincing yet.
11 is also findable, but it seems that the best result is a draw, so don't expect a big positive score.
8 is also solvable, but it might be found due to speculation.
2, 5, and 7 are known to be findable as wins.
EPD
The Nolot Suite as EPD records:External Links
References
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