Lukas didn’t play DeepZen, just “Zen” (or Zen19X on KGS to be specific, also see https://blog.codecentric.de/en/2016/08/codecentric-go-challenge-2016/ <https://blog.codecentric.de/en/2016/08/codecentric-go-challenge-2016/>). As the organizer of the event you’re ought to know that?
> On Jan 18, 2017, at 4:54 AM, Ingo Althöfer <3-hirn-ver...@gmx.de> wrote: > > Hello in the round, > > Yoon Young Sun (9p; living in Hamburg) has commented > round 3 of the codecentric Challenge 2016 (between > DeepZen (Black) and Lukas Kraemer (White)) in > Germany's Go magazine (DGoZ, issue 06/2016, pp.42-45). > > At the end sYoon makes some general comments on DeepZen > (translated to English by me): >> Zen is playing already very strong and is making >> reasonable moves. In my impression it plays more >> human-like than AlphaGo who's moves partly need >> very much of getting used to. >> In principle, in the whole game only move 89 [by Zen] >> was really strange. All other of its moves I like. >> >> Black has been leading already in the opening, >> in particular by help of the exchange 28 for 29. >> After the anxious move 58, 59 cemented the lead. >> After this, White could only try to reach a narrow >> outcome; a win [for White] was no longer possible. > > For your memories: DeepZen had been winning the 2016 > codecentric Challenge by 3-1. > > Ingo.
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