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GameBoy Advance : Virtual Kasparov Reviews

Gas Gauge: 65
Gas Gauge 65
Below are user reviews of Virtual Kasparov and on the right are links to professionally written reviews. The summary of review scores shows the distribution of scores given by the professional reviewers for Virtual Kasparov. Column height indicates the number of reviews with a score within the range shown at the bottom of the column. Higher scores (columns further towards the right) are better.

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IGN 65






User Reviews (1 - 11 of 11)

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Great Game!

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 20 / 21
Date: April 24, 2002
Author: Amazon User

... This version however packs a wallop of perfect balance between fun, difficulty, and speed.
To start the game you have a couple modes quick and story. With quick you set your parameters and launch into a game. With the story mode you are given a world map and bios of opponents for you to beat. This adds to the game since you get a feeling of playing an adversary instead of a computer. After easily beating the first ten ... I was stopped cold by [a] Russian chick. Luckily I can easily select another person to take on. I came back to her after I cooled off and beat some dude in India.
The interface is simple enough pick a piece and move it... What I found great about the game was the speed. Normally the more complex your enemy is slower the computer is to move. Not in this case though, as it is fast and quick to move you along, yet tough enough to actually beat me.
I was also very shocked to see the little extras like board and piece changes. I did not have to use the tutorial but I checked it out for this review. It was fascinating to see some great openers and strategies laid out for anyone to use. It did teach me at least two new things that help me destroy that Russian chick. I guess you are never too old to learn.
In my final analysis I conclude that the game was great with little negatives given that chess is chess and you know what to expect and if it is well done then that is all it takes. If you like chess then you need look no farther. Forget the ... computer sim from [your local store] and check out this GBA gem.

...

Great for Kids

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 12 / 13
Date: March 31, 2003
Author: Amazon User

This is great for kids. I have played tournament chess and used some of the best commercial software. I went through another round of purchases and trials for this time. There is some powerful software available, but I needed something that young kids could learn with. I looked at PDA software as well, but that did not fit the bill either (one with the "legal-moves" is a good fall-back option). The GBA module works very well. It is easy enough for beginners. It shows the moves. It encourages them to compete against opponents with an increasing degree of difficulty. It is compact and inexpensive. A great buy.

Teaches the basics and then play to your skill level.

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 10 / 11
Date: July 23, 2002
Author: Amazon User

I love this game. It has tutorials on chess if you don't already know how the pieces work. Then you start playing people from all around the world each different skills and strategy.

That's what makes this game so nice is that you play it until you meet someone who challenges you. It has a lot of different computer opponents with varying skill levels. It's not like some other chess games that go from very easy to very very hard with little in between. There are many opponents that have some good skills but some weaknesses and some of them seem to make almost human mistakes in their chess plays. Then they get progressively tougher. I like this. It's a nice step of progression to harder opponents. I'm reading some chess books and I know as my skills improve I will be able to move higher towards the more difficult opponents. :)

Amazing!

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 8 / 8
Date: May 24, 2003
Author: Amazon User

This game is AMAZING! I am a novice chess player who has been trying to improve my chess. Ive been reading some books "Complete Idiots guide to Chess", "Reasses your Chess", "The Amatuers mind". And this game is really helping my game. The story mode is cool with 31 different personalites. And they play like different people as well. Some are cautious and play the game running and countering. Others come out blasting like Yosimate Sam. The guy who said there is passwords is mistaken. There are three save slots and the game is saved after every move which means you can play in the doctors office without worrying that you have to finish every game in one go. I have never been happier with a game and have played 6 hr settings regularly. I love this game!

A Rookies opinion

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 7 / 7
Date: January 29, 2004
Author: Amazon User

Clean graphics, with a wide choice of chessboards. A few are difficult to see under average light, but most are fine, and there is a bright, clear black and white board if all else fails. A GREAT feature is that it auto-saves your game at the exact point you left it at. You don't have to back out and find the save screen. Just shut it off, and come back later. No passwords. I don't know what that reviewer was talking about.

I can't offer an opinion as to how the game play stacks up against a good player. I can tell you that although I learned the moves 35 years ago, I've never put any real time into chess. Any other computer or hand-held chess game completely decimated me within moments. Too frustrating to be any fun. I decided to give this a shot, and I'm glad I did.

In "story" mode, the first few "street" players weren't too bad, I actually got through them to take on the master (the master is killing me though) The up shot is that it is enjoyable for me for the first time ever. Although the players have personalities, and playing styles, their moves aren't "canned," They play differently every time.

If you choose "quick game" mode, you can take moves back, replay them, or have the computer choose your move. You can also set up the board for any scenario you like, and jump back and forth between sides if you want.

There are two ways to play another human. You can pass the game boy back and forth, or use a cable. I have not tested the cable. The instructions claim you DO NOT need a second game cartridge.

I don't know how this stacks up to chess master, or other chess games. I can tell you that I consider it money well spent.

Not for the serious chess player, with a caveat.

2 Rating: 2, Useful: 5 / 5
Date: January 09, 2006
Author: Amazon User

Unlike other reviewers here, I would say I'm a serious chess player. This game fell far short of my expectations. As someone who played PalmChess on a PalmPilot III a few years back, I know that it doesn't take a lot of memory or horsepower to beat me.

In story mode, you play in "untimed" mode, where you can think as long as you'd like. Few of the players take more than 4 seconds to make a move. Until you get to Garry, everyone has the same flaw: blunders. Okay, you play the beginners, and you expect to have thrown queens and the like, and you do. But even advanced players will forget to move their queen out of danger, even when you make an obvious attack on it. So you diddle around and avoid mistakes yourself, and eventually you win when they toss a piece. Contrast this with more believable mistakes, like not figuring out a combo leaves them a piece down.

Even Garry isn't much, if you've played much chess against computers.

I said there was a caveat, and here it is: in match mode, you get a countdown clock (5/10/15 minutes) and the computer thinks much longer. I haven't beaten Garry in this mode. The other players still blunder too much to be a serious challenge.

Vitual Kasparov

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 7 / 9
Date: June 23, 2002
Author: Amazon User

This game is the bast game I have seen yet,and I am a big Gameboy Advance critic.I love this game and I recomend it to everyone,and if you don't know how to play chess it will teach you and you will vs. many different chess players.It begins very easy and then gets harder as you work your way up.So if you have a Gameboy Advance you should go out and buy this game imediatly.

almost scary ...like wopr in war games

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 5 / 7
Date: August 13, 2002
Author: Amazon User

i have played several different chess computers as well as numerous human players.this game acts more human than computer.
several times i've had to fight my way back for positioning when after i've set a trap that most computers would fall for find that in response the computer set a trap that appeared to be a blunder.I love the addition of the story mode as it shuffles around the skill levels and will go from basic to grandmaster in one sitting.if you enjoy chess you will enjoy this. with ten different 2d chess boards and 2 3d chessboards this is the perfect solution to travel chess (no pieces to lose) ..............except to the computer that is

problems with tutorial

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 3 / 5
Date: October 11, 2002
Author: Amazon User

The gameplay is fun and I feel that I am learning while playing, not working at learning the game. This alone makes it preferable to the Chessmaster software that is on my computer.
The lettering used in the tutorial is very difficult to read. Had to go into sunlight to go through the tutorial.
Have yet to find the letters to be used to save games. Could not find them on the save page. Games are saved, however when the Game Boy is shut off.

Great for kids . . .

3 Rating: 3, Useful: 1 / 3
Date: December 05, 2004
Author: Amazon User

I agree with the reviewers who say that this game is good for beginners. It has a few good features, such as fun (but short) tutorials, autosave which stores the board position after each move, and has a story mode where you get to play opponents from all over the world. However, I do have a few complaints. First, it has several minor programming glitches. For example, as you move from continent to continent it does not always display the graphics of how many trophies you have won on the current continent, but rather gets stuck on the continent that you started on. Also, it is hard to navigate from continent to continent at times. The second complaint I have is a problem I have found on another chess program as well and must be a common programming oversight. If you set up the board to play out an endgame puzzle against the computer, it occasionally makes illegal moves such as moving it's king into check. This problem is so bad and occurs often enough that I gave up on setting up specific endgame positions to play out, which is too bad because I really need to practice endgames. The last problem I have with it is that ALL of the opponents make major mistakes often and thus are extremely easy to beat. When I unlocked Kasparov (the most difficult opponent in the story mode) I checkmated him in 9 minutes the first time I played him and was never in danger or behind in material at any point. I am not a very strong chess player (I can barely beat my old 8-bit original gameboy version of Chessmaster on the lowest settings) and was disappointed that I was able to beat every opponent on the story mode without any effort. However . . . this would make the game a confidence builder for kids, and would be a good way to introduce a beginner to the game. Most opponents you play in the real world will make major mistakes as well, so playing a computer program that does the same would provide a realistic experience for someone just starting out who's best strategy against this program (and other beginners) may be to play defensively, look for a major mistake, and pounce on it.


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