Wow... a 1-2 pawn handicap weakens Komodo by about 500 ELO. It's possible to draw, and maybe, win a game. However, it doesn't give a zilch about a 4 move disadvantage. It just keeps the position closed until all it's pieces are developed, and then starts to play a normal game... crushing you by an advantage that creeps up by 1/100th of a pawn for 30 moves. I wonder how many handicap moves a player like Nakamura would need to actually win such a game. In the last game, Nakamura actually is a paw UP, and still he's 6 pawns DOWN. That's a 7 pawn (more than a rook...) positional advantage for Komodo.dfan wrote:The most recent handicap games against a top-level player were against Hikaru Nakamura (currently world #6) earlier this year.emeraldemon wrote:Could Magnus Carlsen defeat a computer with a handicap? Say the computer was down a pawn. A knight?
The handicaps were pawn-and-move (Komodo played Black and without one pawn), pawn (Komodo played White and without one pawn), exchange (Komodo played White without a rook, Nakamura played Black without a knight), and 4-move (Nakamura played White and played 4 moves in a row before Komodo started to play).
The first three games were drawn and Komodo won the fourth. All games are at the link I provided earlier and are fun to play through if you are interested in top-level handicap chess.
Clearly, there is a lot of improvement that can be made by humans when playing chess, but I wonder if anyone ever will have the capability to obtain an improvement that large.