Since OS X 10.2 Apple has included a Chess game by default on your Mac. The current version allows you to play against the computer with varying difficultly levels, play. Play, analyze, and improve your game with this affordable software for the Mac. Many of you have been waiting for chess playing software that’s compatible with your Mac. Chess King has all the features you’ll need to improve your game. It analyzes your every move. Login to your Chess.com account, and start enjoying all the chess games, videos, and puzzles that are waiting for you! If you have any issues while logging into your account, do not worry.

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In the Chess app on your Mac, choose Chess Preferences, then select Allow Player to Speak Moves. When you see the feedback window (it shows a microphone icon with a fluctuating loudness indicator), press the shortcut key (the key you specified in Dictation preferences), then speak a command. Try not to hesitate while speaking. Free and Open Source. Version 1.5.4 just released: There is a new Move Reader for visually handicapped users, a dark theme and many other tweaks and fixes. If you don't trust online binaries of if you want to extend ChessX with your own ideas: Download the source here and compile for yourself.

With the free Chess game already included as part of OS X, you may wonder why you’d need another way to play chess on the Mac—or why you’d lay down hard-earned cash to get it. But Feral Interactive’s Chessmaster 9000 isn’t just a chess game. It’s the ultimate chess resource.

Chessmaster 9000 lets you choose from more than 60 different 3-D boards. New players are assigned a basic skill rating, and as you play games, the software adjusts your rating to reflect your skill level. Chessmaster 9000 then uses this rating to select the computer-controlled opponents that are most appropriate for you—opponents range from newbies to grand masters. If you run into trouble during a game, you can get on-the-fly advice from the Chessmaster.

Unless you play chess regularly, you’ll probably want to brush up on your strategy. And to that end, Chessmaster 9000 includes the Classroom. Here you can run tutorials, by real-life chess pros such as Josh Waitzkin, Bruce Pandolfini, and Larry Evans, on everything from moving the pieces to setting up elaborate attacks and defenses. The game lets you specify your level of instruction: beginners can run basic tutorials and drills, intermediate players can practice openings or take the Larry Evans Endgame Quiz, and experts can solve challenging chess puzzles or try advanced drills.

The game provides a Kids’ Room, which offers a simplified interface and basic drills to help youngsters hone their chess skills. There’s also a Database Room for true chess fanatics. A data miner’s paradise, this room contains information on more than half a million real-world chess games—some collected as recently as 2002. Here you can analyze openings, add new game content, and much more.

Chessmaster 9000 includes all the trappings of its Windows counterpart, but thanks to a complete interface overhaul by Feral, it feels like a Mac game. It even connects to iTunes so you can listen to your playlists as you compete. You can also set your iChat status to let others know when you’re playing chess. The game offers online play, but you’re limited to competing against other Mac gamers.

Feral lists the minimum hardware requirement as a 700MHz G4. But even with my 1.5GHz G4, I ran into some occasional pokiness when loading different parts of the game. However, the slowdowns didn’t detract from the otherwise excellent and trouble-free experience.

The Bottom Line

Feral Interactive’s Chessmaster 9000 is the best chess game you can buy for the Mac. It’s an absolute must-have for chess fans who want serious competition and training.

Chessmaster 9000 lets you relive a classic game played by 19th century masters.Chessdunk

Home * Hardware * Macintosh

Original Macintosh [1]
Chessdunk mac os download

Chessdunk Mac Os Download

Macintosh,
a series of personal computers (PCs) designed, developed, and marketed by Apple Inc, introduced on January 24, 1984 by Steve Jobs. It was the first mass-market personal computer featuring a graphical user interface and a mouse.

  • 5Forum Posts
Model Year Processor
Macintosh 128K 198468000
Macintosh II 198768020
Macintosh IIx 198868030
Macintosh Quadra 199168040
Power Mac 1994PowerPC
iMac G3 1998PowerPC G3
iMac G4 2002PowerPC G4
iMac G5 2004PowerPC G5
iMac (Intel) 2006x86-64
Mac Pro 2006, 2013x86-64
MacBook Air
Mac Mini
2020Apple M1
  • Ward Douglas Maurer (1990). Assembly language programming on the Mac with MPW. School of Engineering and Applied Science, George Washington University, GWU-IIST-90-20. » Assembly[3]

Chessdunk Mac Os Catalina

1990 ...

  • Re: Gnu Chess for the Mac by Urban Koistinen, gnu.chess, April 16, 1993 » GNU Chess
  • Re: Macintosh Chess Software links page by William Bryant, rgcc, June 12, 1999

2000 ...

  • HIARCS 11.1 SP / MP Macintosh has arrived! by rafowell, CCC, Apr 03, 2007 » HIARCS
  • Macintosh Glaurung users: Please help by Tord Romstad, CCC, November 23, 2007 » Glaurung

2010 ...

  • good macintosh guy for UCI engine development by Sam Hamilton, CCC, January 25, 2012 » GUI, UCI
  • Re: La Máquina Preservadora. Programas de Ajedrez by Luis a, Meca Foro, May 30, 2013 (Spanish)
  • Stockfish Mac app by Daylen Yang, CCC, January 22, 2014 » Stockfish
  • computerchess on apple by Thorsten Czub, CCC, September 17, 2014
  • Distributing engines for Mac/OSX by Harm Geert MullerCCC, March 17, 2016 » Mac OS

2020 ...

  • Apple New Mac Mini by Michael Byrne, CCC, November 17, 2020
  • M1 Apple Silicon for Chess? by Steve Maughan, CCC, November 24, 2020 » Apple M1[4]
  • Universal binary from Wikipedia » PowerPC, x86, x86-64
  • ATPM 5.09 - Reviews: Shareware Roundup - In Search of the Perfect Chess Mate by William Lovett
  • ATPM 7.02 - Review: Mac Chess Downloads by Richard A. Fowell
  • Mac Chess Engines Repository hosted by Julien Marcel
  1. A Macintosh 128K (that has apparently been upgraded to 512K, see window) running Finder 5.2, Macintosh from Wikipedia
  2. Timeline of Macintosh models from Wikipedia
  3. Macintosh Programmer's Workshop from Wikipedia
  4. Apple M1 from Wikipedia

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