IanO wrote:I have made my
best estimate of the top ten 19x19 computer Go programs on
Sensei's Library, a wiki dedicated to the game of Go. This estimate is hindered by the lack of participation of top programs in
recent computer Go competitions. (There is currently no equivalent to the WCCC in the Go world. The well-funded World Computer Go Championships died off with the Ing Prize in 2000. Participation in the Computer Olympiad by top programs has been spotty.) My results are summarized here; source material is at the first link above.
- 1. MoGo
2. CrazyStone
3. KCC Igo (Silver Star)
4. Haruka
5. Go4++
6. HandTalk (Goemate)
7. GNU Go
8. Many Faces of Go
9. Go Intellect
=10. Wulu, Aya, Katsunari, Go Ahead
Notes:
MoGo and CrazyStone represent the new wave of Monte Carlo-based Go programs. There was recently a short article about the technology in
Scientific American.
CrazyStone is by Remi Coulom, author of The Crazy Bishop. Other than him, there has been little successful cross-pollination between computer Go and computer Chess circles.
KCC Igo from North Korea had a lock on the Gifu Challenge title from 2003-2006. Silver Star, Haruka, and HandTalk are only sold in asian countries, as far as I know.
Ian
That's a cool news, but you just forgot one promising engine, Mango.
And I quote:
Mango is a new Go program based on Monte-Carlo Tree Search, developed by Guillaume Chaslot and Jahn-Takeshi Saito at the University of Maastricht.
Tournament results:
9x9:
Mango was 5th out of 10 in the 12th Computer Olympiad in Amsterdam.
13x13:
May KGS Tournament: 2nd out of 7 (First: CrazyStone Second: Mango Third: Mogo)
April KGS Tournament: 3rd out of 10 (First: CrazyStone Second: Mogo Third: Mango)
January KGS Tournament: 2nd out of 10 (First: Mogo Second: Mango Third: GNU)
19x19:
12th Computer Olympiad: 4th(shared) out of 8 (First: Mogo Second: CrazyStone Third: GNUGo )
March KGS Tournament: 4th out of 12 (First: Mogo Second: GNUGo Third: ManyFacesOfGo)