I also put it in Stockfish, but not at any great depth. It's interesting but not my opening.
FreeRepublic wrote on 11/12/25 at 14:40:11:
(22.Bxf6 Rbc8 is unclear)
FreeRepublic wrote on 11/12/25 at 14:40:11:
Stockfish declares that White has the advantage now, but later tends toward unclear
Your use of "unclear" confuses me. I remember GM Patrick Wolff (who tended more towards Huebner than Capablanca on the annotation spectrum) saying that "unclear" means the annotator stopped the analysis short. Actually he was more blunt and said a GM who says unclear is being lazy. He was talking about Informator annotations back in the day. Some GMs were known for phoning it in.
But when you say unclear after 22...Rbc8, Stockfish tells me equal.
And when you say advantage after 23...Nc4, Stockfish tells me +0.75 or a little higher. I know a few people who say +0.75 is "winning", but in my experience an engine can hold worse positions against another engine, and +0.75 is usually a draw (although not being an engine I have trouble holding the worse side). So when you say it tends to unclear, if you mean it tends to equality then I agree. Again, I did not let the engine run to great depth.
But I think this is the type of position where home analysis can pay off. 24.Ng3 and 24.Nc5 are transposing into each other, white comes within a whisker of nailing the black king, but it's a miss and then it's the white king in danger. Plus the black counterplay with ...Qa7 and ...a5 is kind of looming, so white can't just play some quiet moves and avoid the issue.
Well Stockfish has been running in the background as I type and 24.Nc5 and 24.Ng3 are down to 3rd and 4th place. 24.Nc3 and 24.a3 are trending but more like +0.33. So the engine found a defense (for both sides), but could anybody find the engine lines over the board?