I recently tried the Consult AI feature in ChessBase 26. It's supposed to examine a position and provide a natural-language explanation of plans and strategic characteristics. The position I used arises after 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.e5 c5 5.a3 Bxc3+ 6.bxc3 Qc7 7.Qg4 f5 8.Qg3 cxd4 9.cxd4 Ne7 10.Ne2.
This position from the Classical Winawer is of interest since 10.Ne2 has scored extremely well (about 72% for White) and has put the line on life support for Black. I was curious if the ChessBase AI would have any new or useful ideas for the second player.
The Consult AI function took a few minutes to generate an output, and the result began with an overview of the position. The AI noted that Black was a pawn up. I did a double take and counted just to confirm that both sides had seven pawns. The AI then went on to say that the position had the characteristic French Winawer
dark-square pawn chain on d5, e6, and f5. (Italics mine).
Next, the AI suggested that 10...Qxc2 should be checked as a possible plan, which seems reasonable enough, but then it added that Black can go up two pawns with ...Qxb2, forgetting that White's b2-pawn is longer there.
Returning to the diagrammed position, the AI stated that short castling wasn't longer possible because the black rook was on g8. On the other hand, it said Black needn't worry about Qxg7 since ...Rg8 would trap the white queen, which isn't true. Apparently the AI isn't quite clear where that black rook is. After deciding that short castling was impossible, the AI went on to outline a plan for long castling. (Note that "impossible" or not, 10...0-0 is by far the most common move in the position shown

).
The one sensible plan presented by the AI was ...b6 followed by ...Ba6 to exchange off the "French bishop".
The heading for the "Consult AI" page in ChessBase 26 says, "AI can give valuable insights into the plans of an opening variation, but it can make mistakes. Check every statement carefully!" In this case, the warning is an understatement. It seemed like there were more hallucinations than useful information in this report.
In an earlier thread, I linked to a video were ChessBase programmer Matthias Wüllenweber presented the results of a "Consult AI" report. Perhaps it was luck, or maybe it was a cherry-picked example, but the AI seemed much more reasonable there and no hallucinations occurred, although Wüllenweber did warn about that possibility at one point.
https://en.chessbase.com/post/matthias-wuellenweber-on-all-new-functions-for-che...