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Σάββατο 17 Ιανουαρίου 2026

Chess960 still results in white having an advantage, finds study

 

Chess960 still results in white having an advantage, finds study

08 Jan 2026 Michael Banks
Chess pieces on a board
Queen’s gambit: New research finds that the standard game of chess can give an advantage to white – regardless of where the back pieces are placed (courtesy: istock/gedzun)
Chess is a seemingly simple game, but one that hides incredible complexity. In the standard game, the starting positions of the pieces are fixed, so top players rely on memorizing a plethora of opening moves, which can sometimes result in boring, predictable games. It’s also true that playing as white and therefore going first offers an advantage.

In the 1990s, former chess world champion Bobby Fischer proposed another way to play chess to encourage more creative play.

This form of the game – dubbed Chess960 – keeps the pawns in the same position but randomizes where the pieces at the back of the board – the knights, bishops, rooks, king, and queen – are placed at the start, while keeping the rest of the rules the same. It is named after the 960 starting positions that result from mixing it up at the back.

It was thought that Chess960 could allow for more permutations, making the game fairer for both players. Yet research by physicist Marc Barthelemy at Paris-Saclay University suggests it’s not as simple as this.

Initial advantage

He used the open-source chess program called Stockfish to analyse each of the 960 starting positions and developed a statistical method to measure decision-making complexity by calculating how much “information” a player needs to identify the best moves.

He found that the standard game can be unfair, as players with black pieces who go second have to keep up with the white player's moves.

Yet regardless of starting positions at the back, Barthelemy discovered that white still has an advantage in almost all – 99.6% – of the 960 positions. He also found that the standard setup – rook, knight, bishop, queen, king, bishop, knight, rook – is nothing special and is presumably a historical accident, possibly because the starting positions are easy to remember and visually symmetrical.

“Standard chess, despite centuries of cultural evolution, does not occupy an exceptional location in this landscape: it exhibits a typical initial advantage and moderate total complexity, while displaying above-average asymmetry in decision difficulty,” writes Barthelemy.

For a fairer, more balanced match, Barthelemy suggests playing position #198, which has the starting positions: queen, knight, bishop, rook, king, bishop, knight, and rook.

Michael Banks is the news editor of Physics World magazine.


FROM PHYSICSWORLD.COM       17/1/2026

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