So, I came across a video game on chess called Chess Ultra, and I loved it! The graphics look amazing, the gameplay is the same with chess, and you can play against CPU opponents, from Novice to Grandmaster. I had a lot of fun playing the game, especially against the Grandmaster computer, although I lost against it like several times. lol!


I even decided to play the moves from masters games, including Mikhail Tal's.


In the VR version, you can even play against the Grim Reaper himself. That's right, you're playing for the sake of your soul! How cool is that?

I enjoy Chess Ultra a lot, and I definitely recommend it. The matchmaking is much slower and the interface is a little bit more awkward than playing online at chess.com or lichess -- and you need to be patient to find good games -- but it supports playing against friends as well as random online opponents, and the overall experience with the visuals and the music makes it worthwhile


Once you've played with a given opponent, it has a tendency to match you with the same opponent over and over again, so it's actually a little bit harder to find strangers than it is to play with friends!


It does not allow you to see the grim reaper across the table unless you are using a VR headset, but the environment with the creepy gargoyle pieces with flames coming out of their eyes is available without the VR.


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I wish more players played. I just flat out play better with the more natural look of the board and pieces for some reason. On chess.com I'm like 600. On chess ultra I'm 1136 and climbing. Hell it might even be the relaxing music lmao.

With full Oculus Rift and HTC Vive support, play Chess Ultra in VR for the most breathtaking chess experience to date. From the wood grains on the antique mahogany board in the library, to the luxury felt on the bottom of every chess piece; chess has never looked this good. Physically reach out to make your move and focus entirely on the game at hand. VR players can also take on the ultimate chess challenge, and play against the Grim Reaper in the pits of Gomorrah.

Hi chess lovers! I've been playing Chess Ultra on the PS4 for like a year and a half, and I've noticed that the AI has been really good and suitable for a chess player like me. The grandmaster difficulty was the hardest for me to beat, though it is a computer, so it was bound to make strange and even blunder moves some times.


And it will probably never be the same as the real life grandmaster. But what do you guys think of the AI?


Still, the Grandmaster computer on Chess Ultra actually played opening moves when I tried out Opening Explorer on the chess.com app, and I think the computer would stop automatically playing opening moves after like 17 moves.


Goes to show how this AI was grandmaster-approved.

The AI is very nice and outplays me quite handily at difficulties of 4 and up. I think you are a much stronger player than I am if you can beat it at GM difficulty. I play at a lower level of skill so my opinion is subjective -- but the chess ultra AI seems to value undermining your pawn structure and king safety even more than stockfish does. At lower difficulties, it seems to be willing to make huge material sacrifices to undermine your king's safety so if you can take advantage of that, it's easy to beat. Even at lower difficulties, it sees forks, pins, skewers and combos leading into forks and pins quite consistently. It's difficult to fool, but then it just tosses you a free piece every now and then. I don't think it gives away the free pieces so readily on higher difficulties. Of course even on the GM difficulty it loses consistently to Stockfish 12 NNUE. Everything loses to stockfish 12 NNUE.

I used the menu button on the controller to bring the desktop view back and could see Chess Ultra running in Windowed mode, and I could interact with the game in 2D as if I were sitting at my desktop with a keyboard and mouse, but could not find a way to get the game to load into the quest or play it in VR. Not sure what I'm doing wrong. Is Steam VR interfering here? Edit to add: Just, for whatever it might be worth, I bought Alyx on Steam today and it playyyyyyyyed flawlessly. Love that game. Still, no chess...

I'm a novice chess player who has spent the past year or so really diving in on theory and improving on my game. I play everyday on phone apps and the computer, and had even bought Pure Chess to keep me engaged.

However, whenever I play someone half decent on a physical chess board, I get my ass handed to me. Because I'm so used to visualizing pieces in a very graphic 2D grid that is conducive to phone apps and such, attempting to visualize pieces in 3 dimensions is an incredible challenge to me.

Enter Chess Ultra for the PSVR. I'm able to finally play chess in 3 dimensions and it's nothing short of incredible. It's the equivalent of playing at a chessboard against an invisible man (although I do use the Hell setting quite a bit!). The fact that virtual reality is directly improving a real-life weakness of mine is more than enough evidence for me to conclude VR is truly the future.

I have a sneaking suspicion that no matter what I say here almost all of you readers already know whether you would even consider purchasing a VR chess game, and for those that decide against this purchase, you have chosen poorly. I am not a giant fan of chess, the last time I played would have been on my blackberry some years ago against AI opponents. This game has renewed my like for chess and established itself as one of the best video game adaptations of one of the oldest games still played worldwide today.

Chess Ultra is a chess video game developed and published by Ripstone for the PlayStation 4, Windows, and Xbox One in June 2017. A Switch port was released a few months later. It is the second chess game by Ripstone after Pure Chess (2012). Chess Ultra is the first in-house developed game by Ripstone.[4]

The game features four different graphical locations (fireplace room, living room, museum, dark cave) and four chess piece sets.[3] In the tutorial mode, there are basic lessons for beginners, 80 checkmate challenges for advanced players, and for the most experienced players there is a mode where the player has to recreate historic games by playing the closing moves. The multiplayer supports either local or online play.[5] The online multiplayer supports cross-platform play (except the PS4 version).[6] In the portable mode in the Switch version, local multiplayer can be played by placing the console flat on the table to simulate a chessboard. The computer AI has ten difficulty settings. The game calculates the player's Elo rating when playing against the AI or other players online.[5] The PlayStation 4 version has a PlayStation VR mode.[7]

Chess Ultra received generally positive reviews from critics. Windows Central liked the tutorials and cross-platform multiplayer but disliked the matchmaking system.[9] Digitally Downloaded thought the game is an improvement from Pure Chess in every way.[7] They also liked the table mode in the Switch version.[6] Nintendo Life said the game is "[...] a polished and well constructed title. It falls short of true excellence due to controller quirks in local multiplayer and a few missing conveniences in online play, such as a notification system or means by which to communicate more directly."[5] Nintendo World Report liked how accessible the game is and called it "outstanding".[8] PlanetSwitch.de said that despite a few technical inconsistencies, it's a great chess for on the go.[3]

Its grand old allure suits gaming systems rather well. Yes, you can play chess for free in web browsers and mobile apps, but a bit of prestige around the experience can also be rather appealing. Pure Chess (developed by VooFoo Studios but published by Ripstone) tapped into that on Wii U and 3DS, and now Ripstone has released Chess Ultra on Switch, developed by its own team and seemingly aiming to right the relatively few wrongs of its Pure predecessor.

At its core the idea is the same - matches are presented across beautifully rendered and stylish settings, four of them in this case, with variations in piece styles and material also available. From a grand manor house to trendy public spaces and the rather eerie 'Gomorrah' setting, you have pleasing options to add visual pizzazz to your game. You can choose between camera angles and even move it to a limited degree with the right analogue stick, while there's a lovely soundtrack to add to the ambience. It's an attractive and classy way to play chess either on the TV or portable screen.

For beginners we have Tutorials, which go through the most elementary of basics - such as how each piece moves - to a few more complex openings and scenarios. It's a decent set of lessons for those new to chess, though anyone quite familiar and experienced in the game will likely skip through most of this section. The lessons are concise and require active participation, however, so they are indeed ideal for those keen to get into chess but unsure of how to start.

The player base needs to grow, no doubt about it, but when you find a well-matched opponent you can have an enjoyable real-time game of chess. In addition you can set your rules and invite players from your friend list or those you played recently; you can see who's online but there's no in-app communication, nevertheless you can send the request and see if they join in. When sending speculative invites 24 hours per move is likely the best choice, but if you have online buddies that you chat with in forums / Discord etc you can easily agree a time and get into a game. e24fc04721

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