{"ID":2828470,"CreatedAt":"2026-06-01T04:54:23.091178241Z","UpdatedAt":"2026-06-01T04:54:23.091178241Z","DeletedAt":null,"paper_url":"https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.14319","arxiv_id":"2512.14319","title":"Not all Chess960 positions are equally complex","abstract":"We analyze strategic complexity across all 960 Chess960 (Fischer Random Chess) starting positions. Stockfish evaluations reveal a near-universal first-move advantage for White ($\\langle E \\rangle = +0.33 \\pm 0.12$ pawns), indicating that the initiative is a robust structural feature of the game. To quantify decision difficulty, we introduce an information-based measure $S(n)$ that captures the cumulative information required to identify optimal moves over the first $n$ plies. This measure decomposes into White and Black contributions, $S_W$ and $S_B$, defining a total opening complexity $S_{\\mathrm{tot}} = S_W + S_B$ and a decision asymmetry $A = S_B - S_W$. Across the ensemble, $S_{\\mathrm{tot}}$ ranges from $2.6$ to $17.2$ bits, while $A$ spans from $-4.5$ to $+4.2$ bits (mean $\\langle A \\rangle = -0.26$), showing that openings are nearly evenly split between those that burden White and those that burden Black, with a slight average excess complexity for White. Standard chess (position \\#518, \\texttt{RNBQKBNR}) exhibits near-average total complexity and asymmetry, yet lies far from the configuration that jointly minimizes evaluation imbalance and decision asymmetry. These results reveal a highly heterogeneous Chess960 landscape in which small rearrangements of back-rank pieces can substantially alter strategic depth and competitive balance. The classical starting position--despite centuries of refinement--appears not as an extremum, but as one configuration among many in a broad statistical ensemble.","short_abstract":"We analyze strategic complexity across all 960 Chess960 (Fischer Random Chess) starting positions. Stockfish evaluations reveal a near-universal first-move advantage for White ($\\langle E \\rangle = +0.33 \\pm 0.12$ pawns), indicating that the initiative is a robust structural feature of the game. To quantify decision di...","url_abs":"https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.14319","url_pdf":"https://arxiv.org/pdf/2512.14319v3","authors":"[\"Marc Barthelemy\"]","published":"2025-12-16T11:33:37Z","proceeding":"physics.soc-ph","tasks":"[\"physics.soc-ph\",\"cond-mat.dis-nn\",\"cs.HC\"]","methods":"[]","has_code":false}
