The computer, which can evaluate 3.5 million moves in a second, made a Queen's Indian defense, giving the opponent a clear advantage but keeping its pieces-and especially its queen-on the board. I think I can still win the match," Kramnik said. When you play such a wonderful game, you can't be. "It had the potential to be the best game I have ever played in my life," the 27-year-old Russian said after the match. The second win in a row for Deep Fritz brought the eight-match series to 3-3 in what has been billed the " Brains in Bahrain" challenge. MANAMA, Bahrain-Deep Fritz, the German-developed chess computer, played a nearly flawless game to outwit world champion Vladimir Kramnik in just 34 moves Tuesday and pull even in the $1 million eight-match series.
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