Super Mario Connect 4: It’sa Me, Diagonally

Times are tough for Nintendo. The Wii U is not selling very well. So maybe it is time to focus on old school games that don’t require a screen. Nintendo hasn’t ventured into the world of Connect 4 yet, so why not? I present to you Super Mario Connect 4.

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Connect 4 is a classic kids game. Now it gets a Mario makeover. That should be enough reason for any Nintendo fanboy to buy it to play with their kids. The game features Mario and Luigi faces on the checkers. Play a quick game between Mario Kart races to decide who gets the best drivers or just play to determine which brother is best, Mario or Luigi.

Super Mario Connect 4 is coming this spring, and you can get it for just $25(USD).

[via Chip Chick]

Researcher details method for teaching computers to win at board games through short training videos

Researcher details method for teaching computers to win at board games through short training videos

All right, hotshot — sure, you can trounce your five-year-old niece in a round of Connect Four, but are you ready to do battle with a machine? Łukasz Kaiser of Paris Diderot University in France has detailed a method for teaching computers how to learn relatively simple games like Tic-Tac-Toe, Breakthrough and the aforementioned eternal vertical struggle between checker pieces, using quick videos generally under two minutes in length. “The presented algorithm requires only a few demonstrations and minimal background knowledge,” Kaiser explains, in his paper Learning Games from Videos Guided by Descriptive Complexity, “and, having learned the rules, automatically derives position evaluation functions and can play the learned games competitively.” Kaiser adds, having taken on the world of Tic-Tac-Toe and other relatively simple games that, “there is strong theoretical evidence that it will generalize to other problems.” Now if only we can sum up the world’s issues Connect Four-style, we should be covered.

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Researcher details method for teaching computers to win at board games through short training videos originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Jul 2012 14:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Computer That Can Learn a Board Game in Two Minutes—And Beat You At It [Science]

If you think you’re good at board games, you just met your match. Because a computer scientist has developed machine learning software that can watch your playing for just two minutes—then comprehensively thrash you. More »