Search
Menu
Home
Sources
About
Contacts
REBEL (chess)
REBEL
was a
world champion
chess program
developed by Ed
Schröder
. Development of REBEL started in 1980 on a
TRS-80
, and it was ported many times to
dedicated
hardware
and the fastest microprocessors of the day:
1980s – Running on a TRS-80,
Apple II
, and
inside
of
Mephisto
brand dedicated
chess computers
, it won the
Dutch open computer chess championship
four times.
1991 – Ported to the
ARM
ChessMachine
and named
Gideon
, it won the
World Microcomputer Chess Championship
.
1992 – Gideon won the
World Computer Chess Championship
, the first time a
microprocessor
came
ahead
of a field of
mainframes
,
supercomputers
, and custom chess hardware.
1990s – REBEL was ported to
Microsoft DOS
and then
Microsoft Windows
and sold
commercially
*1997 – REBEL won a match with GM Arthur Yusupov 10.5–6.5, the first successful challenge of a
chess grandmaster
by a commercial program.
*1998 – REBEL won a match with GM
Viswanathan Anand
5–3. He was rated number two in
the world
at the time.
2004 – Ed Schröder retired, releasing the last version of REBEL as the
freeware
chess engine
Pro
Deo
.