AlphaGo versus Ke Jie

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AlphaGo versus Ke Jie was a three-game Go match between the computer Go program AlphaGo Master and current world No. 1 ranking player Ke Jie, being part of the Future of Go Summit in Wuzhen, China, played on 23, 25, and 27 May 2017.[1] AlphaGo defeated Ke Jie in all three games.[2]

Match Date Black White Result Moves
1 23 May 2017 Ke Jie AlphaGo W+0.5 289 sgf
2 25 May 2017 AlphaGo Ke Jie B+Res 155 sgf
3 27 May 2017 AlphaGo Ke Jie B+Res 209 sgf
Result:
AlphaGo 3–0 Ke Jie

Background[edit]

At the time of the match Ke Jie was ranked 1st among all human players worldwide under Rémi Coulom's ranking system, and had held that position since late 2014.[3] Ke Jie was also ranked number one in the world under Korea Baduk Association's,[4] Japan Go Association's[5] and Chinese Weiqi Association's[6] ranking systems.

The version of AlphaGo in this match was AlphaGo Master, the one that defeated top pros in 60 online games,[7] using four TPUs on a single machine with Elo rating 4,858.[8] DeepMind claimed that this version was 3-stone stronger than the version used in AlphaGo v. Lee Sedol.[9] AlphaGo Master was actually the second best version that DeepMind had at the time, for it was already in possession of AlphaGo Zero, a version much stronger than the Master version; this can be known by the fact that Nature received their paper on AlphaGo Zero on April 7, before the games with Ke Jie.[8] DeepMind did not reveal the existence of AlphaGo Zero until the paper was published in Nature in October 2017.

Before the Future of Go Summit, AlphaGo Master defeated Ke Jie by three to zero during its 60 straight wins in the online games at the end of 2016 and beginning of 2017.[10]

Games[edit]

Summary[edit]

Google DeepMind offered $1.5 million winner prizes for this match while the losing side took $300,000 for participating in the three games.[11][12] AlphaGo won all three games against Ke Jie.[13][14] After the match between AlphaGo and Ke Jie, AlphaGo retired while DeepMind continued AI research in other areas.[15] AlphaGo was subsequently awarded a professional 9-dan title by the Chinese Weiqi Association.[16]

Game 1[edit]

On 23 May, AlphaGo (white) won by 0.5 points.

First 99 moves
Moves 100–199 (139 at )
Moves 200–289

Game 2[edit]

The second game was played on 25 May. About 1 hour into the game, Demis Hassabis tweeted that according to AlphaGo's evaluations, Ke was playing perfectly.[17] However, Ke later lost ground on the lower part of the board. About 4 hours into the game, AlphaGo simplified the position, and it became clear that Ke was losing.

AlphaGo (black) won by resignation after move 155.

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