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Can your opponent input your move in a conditional move? If so, how can you decline it if you don't want to accept it?
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i think conditional moves are supposed to work when you make an automatic move of a piece if your opponent makes a move that meets your conditions.
example.
1. e4 (conditional move is set to 1..e5). If your opponent does move to e5, then you can set your second move to 2. d4 or 2. Nf3 etc...
It is not necessary to make your opponent accept a conditional move since you set it with your own conditions otherwise your opponent will know your next moves if you give him an idea on what is your next move and give him the option to accept or not.
just my two cents.
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We want conditional moves, NOW. ,...
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In my opinion, the biggest advantange to conditional moves comes when your opponent only has one legal move; you know exactly when he/she will do (unless he/she resigns), so you can say exactly what you'll do. This can save a lot of wasted time.
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Conditional moves are usefull for any obvious responses. There is no "if he accepts" business. All you do is tell Queen's Alice that if your oponent moves x, you will automatically respond y.
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