Category/Game/chess-related
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Category/Game
- Antimicro
- antimicro is a graphical program used to map keyboard keys and mouse controls to a gamepad. This program is useful for playing PC games using a gamepad that do not have any form of built-in gamepad support. However, you can use this program to control any desktop application with a gamepad; on GNU/Linux, this means that your system has to be running an X environment in order to run this program.
- AppEngine GO
- This is the ancient game of Go, implemented as a web service for Google's AppEngine. You can see the latest bits running at http://go.davepeck.org/ -- I will always run them there, on my own dime. Currently, this service lets you set up a game of Go with a friend. There are no logins or passwords. When it's your turn, you get an email notification. Or, you can silence email and just leave your browser window open. It will update automatically when it's time for you to move.
- Arbitools
- Administration of Chess Tournaments has been monopolized by non-free software. The lack of free tools makes it very difficult for an arbiter to use GNU/Linux.
Arbitools is born to become a colection of utilities for the most common tasks. It is desgined to make it easy to extend. It has been written in python in order to make multiplatform support easy.
FEATURES:
- Different types of files supported.
- Updating data in different types of tournament database files.
- Adding lists of players to already created files.
- Getting standings from tournament database files.
- Add custom tiebreaks to tournament database files.
- Get tournament report files.
- Baby
- The Baby software project includes a chess engine for XBoard, a chess program, a fractal program, and a set of CGI programs to make the web site. BabyChess can be used as an engine with XBoard.
- Castle Game Engine
- Castle Game Engine is an open-source game engine: - General-purpose game engine to develop 3D and 2D games. - Featuring a comfortable visual editor (but everything can also be instantiated from code). - Cross-platform (desktop, mobile, console). Made with love for open-source: Of course works on Linux and can make Linux games. Including low-end Linux systems like Raspberry Pi and PineTab2. As well as on/for FreeBSD. Supports also all popular systems you expect: Windows, macOS, Android, iOS, and Nintendo Switch. - Fast clean code using modern Object Pascal. Compatible with both FPC / Lazarus an Delphi. - Supports many formats for game assets, including glTF, X3D, VRML, Collada, Spine JSON and MD3. - Many graphic effects are possible, including bump mapping, shadows, shader effects, mirrors, post-processing effects, physically based rendering, gamma correction. - Animation, collision detection, 3D sound and more features are available. - User interface, with visual designed, with UI scaling, anchors.
- Chess ,
- GNU Chess is a chess engine. It allows you to compete against the computer in a game of chess, either through the default terminal interface or via an external visual interface such as GNU XBoard.
- Cursewords
- Cursewords is a "graphical" command line program for solving crossword puzzles in the terminal. It can be used to open files saved in the widely used AcrossLite .puz format. Cursewords includes nearly every major feature you might expect in a crossword program, including intuitive navigation, answer-checking for squares, words, and full puzzle, a pausable puzzle timer and a puzzle completeness notification. It is currently under active development, and should not be considered fully "released." That said, it is stable and suitable for everyday use.
- Deadearth
- deadEarth is a role-playing game about survival. Many people think it's simply a post-apocalypse sci-fi game, but it is not that simple. Yes, dE is set in a sci-fi post-apocalypse future, but the game itself is about the struggle to survive, and how you go about surviving.
- Dragon Go Server
- The Dragon Go Server (DGS) is a place where you can play turn-based Go with other players from around the world. It functions more or less the same way as playing Go via email would, but the Dragon Go Server provides a graphical representation of the board and handles things such as time limits, scoring and ratings. DGS players typically submit about five moves per week. Thus, games can be expected to take several weeks to complete. Some people play games much more quickly, and DGS enables a wide range of time limits. Playing Go in real time is not really possible here. Playing in "real time" means that both players are online at the same time and see their opponent's moves immediately, as they would when playing in person. A real-time game would take an hour or so to complete, and if two opponents are agreeable, that can be achieved on DGS, even though it is turn-based. If you prefer to play Go online in real time, you should try a real-time Go server such as KGS or IGS. DGS has a user access quota and users are responsible for keeping queries per time-interval within a normal level. This should not affect most players. DGS also provides discussion forums about Go generally and about DGS itself.
- Eboard
- 'Eboard' is a chess board interface for ICS (Internet Chess Servers, like FICS) and chess engines (like GNU Chess and sjeng) based on the GTK+ toolkit. It reads and writes games in PGN (Portable Game Notation). It provides a friendly user interface with input history, locked scroll back, and multiple board windows.
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