Excalibur electronic 404-2 Manuel d'utilisation

Page 9

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The moves and explanations of

these famous openings are given

in many books on chess.

Entering Your Own Opening

Touch Chess also allows you to set

up any book opening you want—or

even an opening you invent—to

practice. Press 2nd and then

OPTIONS until the display reads

PLAYr. Use +NEXT to set players

to 2. Press 2nd, then make moves

for both sides until the opening

position you want to practice is

reached. Now press 2nd, then

OPTIONS, until the display reads

PLAYr. Use NEXT PIECE to set

players to 1. Press CLEAR and

play against the computer in this

position.

Great Games

At the beginning of the game, you

may select one of sixteen of the

world’s greatest chess games by

pressing 2nd, then OPTIONS, to

display GAME, and then pressing

the +NEXT or -SETUP key to

select a game number.

Along with the game number, you

will see the position of the game

after the first two moves were

played. Press the CLEAR key to

return to normal play starting at

move three. You take the winning

side. The display will show your

total great-game score in two digits

(zero at the start) on the left. On

the right, the display also shows the

amount of points you will win if you

play the correct next great-game

move. If you don’t play the correct

great-game move, an error buzz

will sound and the points for this

move will be divided in half. If the

bonus goes to zero, the correct

move will automatically flash. Most

moves start with 4 bonus points,

but some brilliant moves start with 8

points. The number, players, loca-

tions, and dates of the great games

are given below, along with a brief

explanation of each game. (All

game explanations are © 2000 by

Al Lawrence; all rights reserved.)
1. Adolf Anderssen vs. Lionel Kieseritsky,

London, 1851

This marvelous attacking game, a

King's Gambit, is widely known as

"The Immortal Game." Both players

show the19th-century preference

for attack at all costs, and

Anderssen was one of the most

ingenious attackers of all time.

After 18. Bd6, he gives away both

of his rooks and his queen! In the

final position, his tiny force is

deployed in just the right way to

bring the complete Black army to its

knees.
2. Adolf Anderssen vs. J. Dufresne,

Berlin, 1852

Again we see Anderssen bamboo-

zling his opponent. The game starts

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