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 Post subject: Memorizing Pro Games?
Post #1 Posted: Sat Aug 08, 2015 2:28 pm 
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So I've heard multiple different people talk about playing through and even memorizing pro games among other study practices. My question is what in particular is to gain from memorizing a game and at what level should a player begin memorizing pro games? Also, Being 10 kyu, would it be better to play through pro games or rather to play through low dan games and high sdk games so that I understand what's going on? The following is a game that I really enjoy and have played through about 30 times and can play up to around move 50 without looking. I can do this not because I've deliberately memorized the moves but rather because I've studied the positions enough that the moves make sense.

http://www.go4go.net/go/games/sgfview/14522

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Post #2 Posted: Sat Aug 08, 2015 2:37 pm 
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The consensus here is don't bother until you are strong SDK. The time you spend (hours and hours) playing through and memorising a single game is equivalent to potentially hundreds of problems, or several chapters of a tesuji book, each of which cover positions from many, many different games. I strongly believe that my own path to improvement will come from:

  • Improving reading (E.g. 1001 L&D problems)
  • Building an intuition for vital points/tesuji (e.g. Tesuji)
  • Improving middle game theory (E.g. Attack and Defence)

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 Post subject: Re: Memorizing Pro Games?
Post #3 Posted: Sat Aug 08, 2015 2:37 pm 
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Better to play through pro games.

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 Post subject: Re: Memorizing Pro Games?
Post #4 Posted: Sat Aug 08, 2015 9:13 pm 
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Jujube wrote:
The consensus here is don't bother until you are strong SDK.

I don't think that's the consensus here. I think its closer to we're divided on the subject.

I personally think its useful and helpful. But your mileage may vary.

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Post #5 Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2015 2:57 am 
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xed_over wrote:
Jujube wrote:
The consensus here is don't bother until you are strong SDK.

I don't think that's the consensus here. I think its closer to we're divided on the subject.

I personally think its useful and helpful. But your mileage may vary.


Indeed. What is almost certainly true is that the stronger you are, the more value you can take out of them. But at almost any level beyond beginner, you can get something from pro games. What that is will vary, but you may get inspiration, motivation, ideas, joseki's, shape, and more. My personal impression, based on my experience, and the experience of a good friend who never got stronger than about 22k but still loved the game, is that playing thru pro games helps connect you to the go world (and the history of go if you play thru old games), and is thus enjoyable in it's own right, regardless of any learning value. This works better if you are able to actually play out the stones on an actual board.

Having never learnt more than a couple of games, and forgetting them within a few days of memorizing them, I can't comment on how valuable that specific technique might be or when it will prove valuable.

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Post #6 Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2015 11:35 am 
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I guess I should specify: what I mean to ask is if there's actually a benefit to memorizing the games rather than just playing through them, trying out variations and studying the positions?

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Post #7 Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2015 1:19 pm 
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Joelnelsonb wrote:
I guess I should specify: what I mean to ask is if there's actually a benefit to memorizing the games rather than just playing through them, trying out variations and studying the positions?


Maybe. :)

When I was learning go I avoided relying upon memory. However, I now suspect that I would have done better to memorize problems and variations from commentaries. Pro games? Maybe so.

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Post #8 Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2015 1:19 pm 
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Memorize a few games and report back to us!


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Post #9 Posted: Mon Aug 10, 2015 12:52 am 
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How about posting a commentary on moves 1-50 of that pro game you liked, explaining your understanding of the moves, giving some other good and bad move choices with reasons. Did you think they made any mistakes?

I expect that, and the discussion it generates, will be more useful and interesting than rote memorization.


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Post #10 Posted: Mon Aug 10, 2015 10:54 am 
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Uberdude wrote:
How about posting a commentary on moves 1-50 of that pro game you liked, explaining your understanding of the moves, giving some other good and bad move choices with reasons. Did you think they made any mistakes?

I expect that, and the discussion it generates, will be more useful and interesting than rote memorization.


In addition, the last 50 moves are more likely to be determined than the first 50 and less open to debate. :)

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 Post subject: Re: Memorizing Pro Games?
Post #11 Posted: Sun Aug 16, 2015 11:38 pm 
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I would say first 100-150 since the middle game is so important.

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Post #12 Posted: Wed Aug 26, 2015 3:03 pm 
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I was told to play through pro games to alleviate fear. The professionals tenuki in very different ways than a kyu level player like myself. What I think is important on the board is not what a professional thinks is important.

I also found that replaying a game from memory immediately after playing the game helps with understanding my emotions.

(This is my first post in this forum, I apologize if I made any mistakes.)


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Post #13 Posted: Wed Aug 26, 2015 5:39 pm 
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If it keeps you interested in go, by all means do it. I loved pro games from the very start and the yearly GoGoD CD was my Christmas present to myself. I would just use the GoScorer and go through guessing the first 50 moves or so. After 3 passes I pretty much remembered those 50 perfectly, then I went onto the next game. I did this for every game played between Nie Weiping and Ma Xiaochun, so I wound up playing a lot of 80s moves in the 2000s. I probably had an 80s haircut to match. I'm not sure exactly why I picked those two pros, but I think I was looking for some kind of rivalry so I wouldn't see 100 different styles. Even today I think that's a good idea, but for modern games the pairings are more diverse as the top players change so much. Natural enemies are harder to find. I may go into the deep past and do Chitoku / Genjo. I've done a few of those (actually I study endgame more now) and it is certainly mind-opening how poorly modern games prepare me for understanding older opening moves. Endgame is endgame though, so at least that's (mostly) timeless.

Is this the fastest way to improve? It is certainly not. I spent years winning openings and losing middle games, despite later studying further into the game. But it kept me excited about go and I did not quit. A few years ago at the USGC a Korean pro put up a knight's approach to a star point followed by the large knight's answer. He said this used to be traditional in ancient China but it went away for a long time until one player brought it back into fashion. He asked if anyone knew who and I immediately said Yu Ch'ang-hyeok. (Which he considered the correct answer). I don't think he expected that, but it's one of those weird benefits of seeing a lot of pro games. I studied many Yu Ch'ang-hyeok games when I was in a dark phase thinking I would be doomed to be an attacking player forever and would therefore at least have to learn to do it well.

Do you want to improve the fastest? Sure, go into a closet, do tsumego for a couple of years, then come out, shave and start playing. There are people who have done it, but unfortunately I think they skipped the shaving part. The risk is that you won't want to play go anymore, which is why I say it is better to do what you love.


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Post #14 Posted: Thu Aug 27, 2015 12:08 am 
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My answer would be along the same lines than Calvin Clark. I've always replayed a lot of pro games, memorized some I found very interesting and forgotten them after a few days/weeks. Has it been useful ? Maybe but I'll never know how I would have done without that. The main point is that I love doing it and it plays no small parts in my enjoying go.

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Post #15 Posted: Sun Jan 10, 2016 11:35 am 
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It's a good thing to have a continious flow of fresh ideas, new inspiration, new opinions, new moves, new strategies.
Pro games do contain a lot of information.

When I study pro games, I like to use a real board.
But I put my laptop next to it. I tend to use a database system (e.g. kombilo) to compare the moves of different pro games to each other. I often start studying 1 specific game, and then end up studying a different one.

I'm not sure if this counts as studying pro games, in a way it's maybe more like studying joseki, fuseki, ... at the same time.
I must admit that my way of study feels a bit like "cheating", maybe studying professional games the conservative way does teach you more about all phases of the game. But this computer-aided way of studying does save me a lot of time.

I tend to select games from positions that often occur in my daily games. I do try to combine this by actually playing a lot of games.

But it's important to replay what you have learned, again and again and again. Not just that same day, but day after day, week after week. And still you will forget most of what you've learned eventually. But if some of it sticks, it's a success.

E.g. here's a convenient sequence that I recently discovered, from this way of studying:
Image

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Post #16 Posted: Tue Jan 12, 2016 12:14 pm 
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Joelnelsonb wrote:
I guess I should specify: what I mean to ask is if there's actually a benefit to memorizing the games rather than just playing through them, trying out variations and studying the positions?

If you play through the game thoroughly (ideally, with commentary) and study the variations and the positions, you should already have naturally memorized the game.


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Post #17 Posted: Wed Jan 13, 2016 6:58 pm 
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For strong SDK game memorization I would recommend using the games of Shusaku in invincible, memorizing all the variations and the 'game story' of how things develop. This not only makes it easier to remember the game, but makes important points in invincible stick quite well. So games with variations and comments are very good to memorize.

If you want to just go old school and memorize some pro games from something like gokifu.com or old archives, then go ahead. But stay away from games with too much fighting and complicated Joseki. Japanese games from the period 1970-1990's is best cause the style is more simple and 'proper' compared to the modern hard fighting and complicated styles with attachments etc.



Now, I've tried the second part. The novelty soon wore off and I stopped, but it did help me a little. I imagine if you continued, gathering a large 'folder' of different games/moves in your mind, then it can be extremely useful. To truly benefit from this, you'd have to memorize alot of games, not just 5 or 10, althrough you'll still get some benefit from that. In other words, I think benefit grows exponentially here, so starting out and spending hours every single day memorizing pro games is the kind of thing insei would do to get an extra boost to their games. It is also something you can do if you don't have a teacher and want to learn proper form/shapes etc, but for many people memorizing 'raw' games is a waste of time. Doing tsumego and tesuji problems + playing and reviewing your games is the way to go until you reach atleast KGS 3d probably higher still as 3d KGS isn't that strong (Compared to insei who do it?)

But, the benefit and fun factor from memorizing the games in invincible while going through it can be great. So If you want to give this a shot I highly recommend going this route instead of going 'raw'



Having said that, here are the games I memorized before I stopped it. I might continue this experiment some other time when I have more time on my hands. I call it a partial success. One last thing I found as I repeated the games on my real board day after day. I began understanding moves that were previously quite hard for me to grasp. I began to get a deeper understanding of why someone played in a certain way. The flow of the game etc. So if initially you don't understand the whole game that isn't a big deal. If you replay it enough times, even a beginner will start to intuitively understand certain things and I think that can be very helpful.


Note: Contains 11 SGF files of games I selected for myself to memorize. I've memorized all of them.
Principles:
*Simple and easy to understand
*Short'ish
*No or very little ko
*Something interesting like a novel shape or fascinating proper move or reinforcement. Something eyecatching.


Attachments:
11 Memorization games.zip [8.3 KiB]
Downloaded 380 times

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Post #18 Posted: Wed Jan 13, 2016 10:30 pm 
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I have a terrible memory. I can remember maybe the first 10 moves, and get an idea of what moves were played after that, or particular sequences, but I do enjoy playing out professional games and studying them.

I'm not sure about the value in just memorizing. I'm only a SDK, and I just started really looking at pro games, but isn't it more beneficial to study the moves - play a move, figure out why it was played, where to play next (as both players), etc, instead of just memorizing?

Useful advice:
http://senseis.xmp.net/?BenjaminTeuber%2FGuideToBecomeStrong#toc9

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Post #19 Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 7:44 am 
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OtakuViking wrote:
One last thing I found as I repeated the games on my real board day after day. I began understanding moves that were previously quite hard for me to grasp. I began to get a deeper understanding of why someone played in a certain way. The flow of the game etc. So if initially you don't understand the whole game that isn't a big deal. If you replay it enough times, even a beginner will start to intuitively understand certain things and I think that can be very helpful.

I found this to be true for me as well

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Post #20 Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 7:55 am 
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sparky314 wrote:
I have a terrible memory. I can remember maybe the first 10 moves, and get an idea of what moves were played after that, or particular sequences, but I do enjoy playing out professional games and studying them.

Your memory will improve with practice.
I've been better able to remember my own games after doing this.

sparky314 wrote:
I'm not sure about the value in just memorizing. I'm only a SDK, and I just started really looking at pro games, but isn't it more beneficial to study the moves - play a move, figure out why it was played, where to play next (as both players), etc, instead of just memorizing?

Don't worry so much about actual memorization. It kind of just happens naturally with the practice of playing through the games.

Study the moves if you like, or don't. Eventually, the study is really the point, but initially, not so much (depending on your own level of understanding). I'll make up my own reasons for the moves, as it aids in the memorization -- when the moves have a reason and purpose, then you'll know why they were played and it becomes no effort to memorize them. Its okay if your reasons are wrong, as you'll revise and improve your reasoning as you go along and learn to study deeper.


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