Eighteen Changes in Jin Peng is a global chess book compiled by Xu Zhi in Ming Dynasty. The famous chess critic Li Cheng adapted it from 1958 to 1982.
This ancient chess book of China is the first chess book of China in the world. As Huang Guojun said in the preface of this book, "The appearance of the Eighteen Changes in Jin Peng is like a bright light in the night, illuminating the direction and road of global research." Jin Peng's eighteen changes can be seen in many places in later chess manuals, such as Secrets in Oranges and Secrets in Plums.
Jin Peng's Eighteen Changes Chess Manual was edited and published by Chengdu Chess Garden, June 1982,1October 1983.
First, The Golden Score systematically expounds the various changes of the gunfight bureau, with shotguns and hand guns as the mainstream tactics, forming a relatively complete pedigree of Jin Peng, such as The Secret of Jin Peng, Invincible Outside the Cave and The Secret in the Orange.
Second, the spectrum introduces a variety of openness. In the era when Top Gun dominated the chess world, the "Golden" spectrum has realized that horses are used to compete with Chinese artillery, and the strategic idea of static braking and soft braking has been reflected in the spectrum, and the wind curtain horse came into being and received initial attention. On this basis, Wang Zaiyue, a writer in the Qing Dynasty, corrected the biased understanding of "the machine gunner will win" and "the Malaysian side will lose" in his book "The World is Highly Developed".
Thirdly, China's chess theory system was originally conceived in Synopsis of the Golden Chamber, and a relatively complete and vivid chess terminology appeared, and the advantages and disadvantages of various situations were briefly and accurately commented, and the main points of attack and defense were pointed out, which was a summary from perceptual to rational. Chess Manual, which was placed at the top of the score, was included in Secrets in the Orange, and was regarded as the golden rule and classic by ancient chess players as the "whole purpose" of the book.