Sargon II
N/A
AppleII 8-bit C64 VIC20

Sargon II

Released: Dec 31, 1979
Series:
Sargon
Genres:
Card & Board Game Sport Strategy
Description from IGDB IGDB

Origin The original SARGON was written by Dan and Kathleen 'Kathe' Spracklen in a Z80-based computer called Wavemate Jupiter III[1] using assembly language through TDL Macro Assembler. The name was originally written entirely in capitals because early computer operating systems such as CP/M did not support lower-case file names. Introduction SARGON was introduced at the 1978 West Coast Computer Faire where it won the first computer chess tournament held strictly for microcomputers, with a score of 5-0.[2][3] This success encouraged the authors to seek financial income by selling the program directly to customers. Since magnetic media were not widely available at the time, the authors placed an advert in Byte Magazine and mailed $15 photocopied listings that would work in any Z80-based microcomputer.[1] Availability of the source code allowed porting to other machines. For example, the March–April 1979 issue of Recreational Computing describes a project that converted Sargon to an 8080 program by using macros. Later the Spracklens were contacted by Hayden Books and a book was published.[4] Commercialization through electronic media When magnetic media publishing became widely available, a Navy Petty Officer, Paul Lohnes, ported Sargon to the TRS-80, altering both graphics, input, and housekeeping routines leaving the Spracklen's chess-playing algorithm intact. Paul consulted with the Spracklens, both living in San Diego at the time, to make the TRS-80 version an instant success with the help of Hayden Book's newly established software division: Hayden Software. Paul was not involved in further refinements to the TRS-80 version due to his reassignment to sea duty shortly after signing the deal with Hayden Software. In the early 1980s SARGON CHESS was ported to several earlier microcomputers, i.e. NASCOM (by Bits & PCs, 1981), Exidy Sorcerer, Sharp MZ 80K,[5] and many others. A complete rewrite was necessary later for the Apple II port, made by Kathleen's brother Gary Shannon. Both were published by Hayden Software. Sequels The Spracklens made significant improvements on the original program[1] and released Sargon II. In 1978 it tied for third at the ninth North American Computer Chess Championship despite being seeded ninth of 12 entries. Sargon finished only behind Belle and Chess 4.7, and defeated AWIT—running on a $5 million Amdahl mainframe—amazing the audience.[6][3][1] That year they published a series of articles in BYTE on computer chess programming,[2][7] stating "we think it would be nice if not everyone had to reinvent the wheel".[6] Sargon II was ported to a variety of personal computers popular in the early 1980s.[8] The game engine featured multiple levels of lookahead to make it more accessible to beginning chess players. BYTE in 1980 estimated that Sargon II had a 1500 rating at the highest tournament-time difficulty level, and speculated that it was the best chess program on sale, including dedicated devices.[9] Sargon 2.5, sold as a ROM module for the Chafitz Modular Game System, was identical to Sargon II but incorporated pondering.[10] It received a 1641 rating at the Paul Masson tournament in June–July 1979, and 1736 at the San Jose City College Open in January 1980.[3] Sargon 3.0 finished in seventh place at the October 1979 North American Computer Chess Championship. The competition had improved, but 3.0 drew against Cray Blitz and easily defeated Mychess, its main microcomputer rival. In December 3.0 easily won the second microcomputer championship in London.[3] In 1980, the Spracklens' Reversi game finished in first place at a computer tournament at Northwestern University, and in 1981 it finished in third place at the Santa Cruz Open Othello Tournament.[11] Sargon III was a complete rewrite from scratch. Instead of an exchange evaluator, this version used a capture search algorithm. Also included was a chess opening repertoire. This third version was written originally for the 6502 assembler and was commercially published by Hayden Software in 1983. Apple contacted the Spracklens and, after a port for 68000 assembly, Sargon III was the first third-party executable software for the Macintosh.[1] After the demise of Hayden Software, later chess programs were also released under the name Sargon, including Sargon IV (Spinnaker Software), Sargon V (Activision) and a CD-i title simply named Sargon Chess. The Spracklens concurrently wrote the engines for the dedicated chess computers produced by Fidelity Electronics, which won the first four World Microcomputer Chess Championships.

Basic Info
Release Date: December 31, 1979
IGDB ID: 47209
Additional Information
Release Date: December 31, 1979
IGDB ID: 47209
Series: Sargon
Платформы 4
AppleII
8-bit
C64
VIC20
Genres 3
Card & Board Game Sport Strategy
Publishers
Commodore Business Machines, Inc.

No description available

Keywords
game 38048 be 24685 world 21802 play 21097 player 17513 feature 15873 release 15455 base 15453 use 15100 make 14384 time 14243 publish 13338 series 12332 system 10915 include 10330 become 9243 level 9243 against 7506 place 7453 help 7417 year 6795 defeat 6547 live 6448 open 5990 begin 5973 complete 5898 allow 5778 name 5584 run 5583 work 5542 main 5210 city 5126 high 5081 call 4960 original 4831 version 4816 late 4742 leave 4474 best 4424 multiple 4356 variety 4345 home 4136 available 4020 title 3980 support 3943 party 3696 search 3645 simple 3432 early 3299 american 3225 state 3213 graphic 3143 write 3097 several 3090 computer 3048 improve 2938 win 2774 easy 2662 sequel 2646 port 2591 draw 2520 hold 2515 seek 2501 north 2500 receive 2372 originally 2347 think 2286 produce 2275 short 2217 book 2151 deal 2101 difficulty 1976 difficult 1962 sell 1914 further 1848 introduce 1798 involve 1790 october 1721 medium 1673 capture 1658 project 1621 engine 1577 december 1553 march 1528 machine 1465 instead 1461 software 1429 personal 1426 entry 1407 due 1356 sea 1337 simply 1333 electronic 1330 low 1312 popular 1293 april 1286 example 1281 entirely 1253 device 1242 june 1236 divide 1205 score 1190 source 1161 directly 1135 january 1129 july 1114 alter 1077 finish 1052 case 1048 success 1022 rival 985 establish 960 million 959 origin 935 bit 907 brother 904 language 885 program 840 operate 791 amaze 760 necessary 756 significant 746 code 735 issue 732 iii 668 improvement 652 easily 645 sale 645 describe 643 rat 633 author 613 despite 603 incorporate 603 exchange 597 newly 588 competition 581 contact 564 dedicate 559 tie 547 accessible 536 sign 532 west 532 capital 530 input 529 duty 525 tournament 517 difficulty level 513 encourage 509 introduction 501 customer 462 file 462 magazine 439 seed 428 officer 424 audience 404 sharp 394 estimate 370 sorcerer 361 college 339 university 337 nice 328 scratch 321 apple 312 routine 302 division 292 coast 287 wheel 287 module 270 instant 265 seventh 263 chess 254 convert 244 rom 242 mainframe 232 financial 226 championship 225 identical 224 santa 222 rewrite 211 ches 191 demise 190 income 190 article 187 widely 187 london 183 shortly 182 ninth 178 paul 167 mail 144 modular 139 intact 116 byte 103 electronics 100 compute 96 strictly 91 gary 90 algorithm 86 macintosh 86 consult 85 assembly 79 commercially 79 navy 74 fidelity 71 availability 68 petty 62 blitz 59 jupiter 58 belle 50 refinement 47 ponder 44 magnetic 42 reinvent 39 repertoire 36 executable 33 macro 33 concurrently 32 recreational 27 speculate 20 microcomputer 18 northwestern 16 shannon 7 assembler 6 housekeep 6 reversi 6 advert 4 othello 4 spinnaker 4 evaluator 3