Jocke wrote:Exactly!I think having that ranking is a definition of being good at go. That's my motivation.
Then, as all the rest of us said, it hugely depends on what kind of sub-200-game beginners you're thinking about.
Jocke wrote:Exactly!I think having that ranking is a definition of being good at go. That's my motivation.
Boidhre wrote:Dusk Eagle wrote:I disagree that being able to always beat beginners at any game, not just Go, defines being good at the game. Good players can always beat players who can always beat players who can always beat players who can always beat players who can always beat beginners at a game.
It may be the OP wants to avoid the situation of sitting down across from someone, getting thrashed, and asking how long they've been playing and getting "3 months" back as an answer after they themselves have been playing two years.
Bantari wrote:Very interesting and unusual question. Interesting.
Still, if I had to answer this, I see two aspects.
1. What rank can one reach within 200 games, and
2. What rank will always beat that rank.
Taking into account that ranks indicate only statistical likelihood of beating a person, there might never be a 100% (or 0% chance.) Which brings up a third question:
3. What winning likelihood would you accept? 10%? 1%? 0.1%? 0.01%? Or what?
Question #1 is crucial here, and I have no clue how to answer. Not sure if anybody does - it just depends on too many factors.
In more practical terms, as a very inexact approximation, I'd say this:
1. Lets assume average person can reach up to 10k if they are really trying hard, and
2. Lets assume 1d has enough winning chance against 10k to satisfy you.
So just get to 1d and you're golden. Heh...
Claint wrote:Since you have defined the expected win percentage, which is 0.001, I can answer the problem from, say my side, using ELO rating system and EGF ranks.
I am pretty sure I haven't played 200 19x19 games yet, but I might be close or over if you count the smaller board games. My rating is 5-6kyu ish KGS. Let's say, I am the guy and I am 6kyu.
According to ELO formula the expected win percentage is magnified 10 times with each rating difference of 400. So for 0.001 chances, you need a rating difference of 1200.
So with EGF ranks: 6kyu = 1500 ELO rating.
That means we need a guy with 2700 rating. Which again with EGF ratings is equal to 7 dan amateur or 1d professional.
Note: This is a quick calculation and is probably wrong, since according to reference, EGF modifies the normal ELO formula somewhat. But 0.001 is a mighty difference.
Ref:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elo_rating_system
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Go_ranks_and_ratings
Boidhre wrote:Claint wrote:Since you have defined the expected win percentage, which is 0.001, I can answer the problem from, say my side, using ELO rating system and EGF ranks.
I am pretty sure I haven't played 200 19x19 games yet, but I might be close or over if you count the smaller board games. My rating is 5-6kyu ish KGS. Let's say, I am the guy and I am 6kyu.
According to ELO formula the expected win percentage is magnified 10 times with each rating difference of 400. So for 0.001 chances, you need a rating difference of 1200.
So with EGF ranks: 6kyu = 1500 ELO rating.
That means we need a guy with 2700 rating. Which again with EGF ratings is equal to 7 dan amateur or 1d professional.
Note: This is a quick calculation and is probably wrong, since according to reference, EGF modifies the normal ELO formula somewhat. But 0.001 is a mighty difference.
Ref:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elo_rating_system
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Go_ranks_and_ratings
I don't think you can assume that winning percentage in go increases by the same factor for each rank once you go past 2 or 3 stones difference.
Shinkenjoe wrote:You also need to play thousand games to lose one in a thousand.
Shinkenjoe wrote:You also need to play thousand games to lose one in a thousand.
Bill Spight wrote:Shinkenjoe wrote:You also need to play thousand games to lose one in a thousand.
Actually, if you play 69 games at those odds, the probability is 0.500 that you will lose one.
Claint wrote:My rating is 5-6kyu ish KGS. Let's say, I am the guy and I am 6kyu.
According to ELO formula the expected win percentage is magnified 10 times with each rating difference of 400. So for 0.001 chances, you need a rating difference of 1200.
So with EGF ranks: 6kyu = 1500 ELO rating.
That means we need a guy with 2700 rating. Which again with EGF ratings is equal to 7 dan amateur or 1d professional.
Note: This is a quick calculation and is probably wrong, since according to reference, EGF modifies the normal ELO formula somewhat. But 0.001 is a mighty difference.
lightvector wrote:Bill Spight wrote:Shinkenjoe wrote:You also need to play thousand games to lose one in a thousand.
Actually, if you play 69 games at those odds, the probability is 0.500 that you will lose one.
Do you mean 690? (Actually, 692 or 693):
(999/1000)^692 ~= 0.50040
(999/1000)^693 ~= 0.49990
Bill Spight wrote:Shinkenjoe wrote:You also need to play thousand games to lose one in a thousand.
Actually, if you play 693 games at those odds, the probability is 0.500 that you will lose one.
Edit: Corrected, as lightvector pointed out.
Shinkenjoe wrote:Bill Spight wrote:Shinkenjoe wrote:You also need to play thousand games to lose one in a thousand.
Actually, if you play 693 games at those odds, the probability is 0.500 that you will lose one.
Edit: Corrected, as lightvector pointed out.
OK. After winning 693 ganes with this porbability you have to star fearing.
illluck wrote:Shinkenjoe wrote:Bill Spight wrote: Actually, if you play 693 games at those odds, the probability is 0.500 that you will lose one.
Edit: Corrected, as lightvector pointed out.
OK. After winning 693 ganes with this porbability you have to star fearing.
Sorry, still wrong XD