Click to View Full Infographic. Chess: IBM's Deep Blue vs. Garry Kasparov. with Kasparov falling 3½–2½ in a match against the colloquially named Deeper Blue. The event is widely GrakzO. October 2, 2014. Illustration by Never Ever Even. When IBM’s Deep Blue beat chess Grandmaster Garry Kasparov in 1997 in a six-game chess match, Kasparov came to believe he was facing a machine that could experience human intuition. “The machine refused to move to a position that had a decisive short-term advantage,” Kasparov wrote after Deep Blue is the chess machine that defeated then-reigning World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov in a six-game match in 1997. There were a number of factors that contributed to this success, including: a massively parallel system with multiple levels of parallelism, effective use of a Grandmaster game database. This paper describes the Deep Blue Garry Kasparov (born April 13, 1963, Baku, Azerbaijan, U.S.S.R. [now Baku, Azerbaijan]) Soviet-born chess master who became the world chess champion in 1985. Kasparov was the youngest world chess champion (at 22 years of age) and the first world chess champion to be defeated by a supercomputer in a competitive match. The basis of Kasparov’s claims went all the way back to a move the computer made in the second game of the match, the first in the competition that Deep Blue won. Kasparov had played to The 32-year-old Russian had won two games, the computer had won one; and the two draws, worth half a point each player, left the score Kasparov 3, Deep Blue 2. All Kasparov needed to win the match

garry kasparov vs deep blue full match