@divergentshift said in #5:
> I can't analyze games on this website. I am fairly new to internet chess. And I barely know how to use ai to analyze stuff on here and che$$com. I made a move. And I wanted to know what the best move was according to ai. Whether it was the move I made or something else. Spent 5min trying to figure out this one simple question and could not. All the numbers and buttons all confusing. On che$$com everything is much easier and simple. I would like to use Lichess. But the Che$$com site is just way easier to figure out. And has nicer looking graphics. If I analyze my game on there, I always know what their suggested best move is in any position.
When I request game review on one of my games on chesscom it shows me the list with the moves and some comments every now and then. When it says I failed to see a tactic and I want to see what the best move was that I missed, I get lost in the thousands of clicks that I have to do and tabs that open from the game review page to end up in the analysis board which is where the engine, which is what I'm looking for, actually is.
When you finally end up in that page you can see that it's the exact same analysis board page that there is on Lichess, with the difference that on here you don't need to get crazy to find it because it's right there when you open the game.
On Lichess to see the best move in the position you don't need to request a complete computer analysis, you can just activate the engine button, which is on the top left of the moves list, and it will show you some arrows (according to how many lines you selected in the settings). The thicker the arrow the better the move.
If instead you want to see the computer analysis with acpl and blunders it will show you the best move after an inaccuracy/mistake/blunder directly in the game notation (the moves list to be clear is called that way) in words. If you want to see the best move regardless of an error of the player you can still toggle the engine button to show arrows.
> I can't analyze games on this website. I am fairly new to internet chess. And I barely know how to use ai to analyze stuff on here and che$$com. I made a move. And I wanted to know what the best move was according to ai. Whether it was the move I made or something else. Spent 5min trying to figure out this one simple question and could not. All the numbers and buttons all confusing. On che$$com everything is much easier and simple. I would like to use Lichess. But the Che$$com site is just way easier to figure out. And has nicer looking graphics. If I analyze my game on there, I always know what their suggested best move is in any position.
When I request game review on one of my games on chesscom it shows me the list with the moves and some comments every now and then. When it says I failed to see a tactic and I want to see what the best move was that I missed, I get lost in the thousands of clicks that I have to do and tabs that open from the game review page to end up in the analysis board which is where the engine, which is what I'm looking for, actually is.
When you finally end up in that page you can see that it's the exact same analysis board page that there is on Lichess, with the difference that on here you don't need to get crazy to find it because it's right there when you open the game.
On Lichess to see the best move in the position you don't need to request a complete computer analysis, you can just activate the engine button, which is on the top left of the moves list, and it will show you some arrows (according to how many lines you selected in the settings). The thicker the arrow the better the move.
If instead you want to see the computer analysis with acpl and blunders it will show you the best move after an inaccuracy/mistake/blunder directly in the game notation (the moves list to be clear is called that way) in words. If you want to see the best move regardless of an error of the player you can still toggle the engine button to show arrows.