The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
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zac
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The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
Hi everyone,
Looking for advice on the appropriate level to read "The endgame" and "Get strong at the Endgame". I feel like I've got little to no idea what to do during the endgame aside from looking for "big-ish" "sente" points and playing them. No ideas really about endgame tesuji or counting or anything.
Is it possible to work through 'Get Strong At' without having read the Endgame book? I find problems a lot of fun and easy to fit into my daily life; but theory books can be a little dense and sometimes feel like a chore to read..
Should I be worried about this at KGS 8k? Or should I just stick to my current program of tesuji/l&d problems, playing and reviewing?
Looking for advice on the appropriate level to read "The endgame" and "Get strong at the Endgame". I feel like I've got little to no idea what to do during the endgame aside from looking for "big-ish" "sente" points and playing them. No ideas really about endgame tesuji or counting or anything.
Is it possible to work through 'Get Strong At' without having read the Endgame book? I find problems a lot of fun and easy to fit into my daily life; but theory books can be a little dense and sometimes feel like a chore to read..
Should I be worried about this at KGS 8k? Or should I just stick to my current program of tesuji/l&d problems, playing and reviewing?
- EdLee
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Hi Zac, that's a very good question. (And a very popular one here and on other servers, too.)
There's another recent thread, I think by Kirby -- study what you enjoy.
Pros have to work very hard because it's their livelihood; they have to feed their family.
For us amateurs, it's different. If it's a big chore for you, you're not going to stick to it anyway,
not for long. So, find some method(s) that you enjoy and that you can sustain over a longer period of time.
There's another recent thread, I think by Kirby -- study what you enjoy.
Pros have to work very hard because it's their livelihood; they have to feed their family.
For us amateurs, it's different. If it's a big chore for you, you're not going to stick to it anyway,
not for long. So, find some method(s) that you enjoy and that you can sustain over a longer period of time.
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Boidhre
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Re: The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
I don't own "The Endgame" but I got "Get Strong at the Endgame" through SmartGo Books. I'm maybe a little stronger than you, not enough to make any difference I should think.
The easy question first: Do you need this? No. You can ignore this beyond the simplest rules of thumb since games at our level are more often decided long before the endgame begins rather than in the endgame so the extra 3 or 4 points you might pick up here won't really help cover the 20 point errors you're making in the midgame already often enough to make the time spent doing this instead of working explicitly on your reading worth it.
The second question: You don't need to read "The Endgame" first similar to how you don't need to read "Tesuji" before doing "Get Strong at Tesuji." Would it help? Probably. Would "Get Strong at..." help reinforce what's in "The Endgame," almost certainly. So combining them is an advantage but not absolutely necessary.
I picked up GSATE purely out of curiosity and I dip into it now and then because I enjoy endgame problems. I also do endgame problems on GoChild. In the GoChild ones you're still reading sequences out, you're just not looking to kill or live so it's still reading practice. GSATE is a combination of counting and looking for tesuji. Fun, I'm not sure how relevant it is to weak SDKs though.
The easy question first: Do you need this? No. You can ignore this beyond the simplest rules of thumb since games at our level are more often decided long before the endgame begins rather than in the endgame so the extra 3 or 4 points you might pick up here won't really help cover the 20 point errors you're making in the midgame already often enough to make the time spent doing this instead of working explicitly on your reading worth it.
The second question: You don't need to read "The Endgame" first similar to how you don't need to read "Tesuji" before doing "Get Strong at Tesuji." Would it help? Probably. Would "Get Strong at..." help reinforce what's in "The Endgame," almost certainly. So combining them is an advantage but not absolutely necessary.
I picked up GSATE purely out of curiosity and I dip into it now and then because I enjoy endgame problems. I also do endgame problems on GoChild. In the GoChild ones you're still reading sequences out, you're just not looking to kill or live so it's still reading practice. GSATE is a combination of counting and looking for tesuji. Fun, I'm not sure how relevant it is to weak SDKs though.
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Bill Spight
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Re: The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
zac wrote:Hi everyone,
Looking for advice on the appropriate level to read "The endgame" and "Get strong at the Endgame". I feel like I've got little to no idea what to do during the endgame aside from looking for "big-ish" "sente" points and playing them. No ideas really about endgame tesuji or counting or anything.
Is it possible to work through 'Get Strong At' without having read the Endgame book? I find problems a lot of fun and easy to fit into my daily life; but theory books can be a little dense and sometimes feel like a chore to read..
Should I be worried about this at KGS 8k? Or should I just stick to my current program of tesuji/l&d problems, playing and reviewing?
As far as endgame plays go, you are concerned with the evaluation of plays, with sente and gote, with the sequence of play, and with tesuji. If plays are simple, then evaluation and determining whether a play is sente or gote or ambiguous are easy. The question of the sequence of play is not so easy, because it is concerned with the choice between plays of the same size, or with exceptional cases: with making a smaller play before a larger play, or with ignoring a sente, or with playing a sente before the opponent will answer it, and so on. Endgame tesuji have varying degrees of difficulty.
You do not have to be very strong to learn the basics of evaluation and classification of plays in terms of sente and gote. Just start with simple plays. Once plays are no longer simple, then the difficulty of those tasks becomes much greater. As a practical matter, you have to know which plays to consider and which plays to ignore. And to do that, you have to know tesuji.
As for studying the sequence of play, if you can't evaluate and classify plays, you cannot even start. That is an advanced topic. Most problems in the sequence of play that you find in books or magazines simply require you to make the plays in order of size.
Some years ago I considered writing an introductory endgame book, aimed at 10 kyu players. After looking at a number of 10 kyu vs. 10 kyu games, I realized that the main thing that 10 kyus needed to learn about the endgame was how to handle shortage of liberties. As liberties get filled at the end of the game, opportunities to exploit the shortage of liberties arise. Big swings can occur. The ability to distinguish between a move than gains 2 points and one that gains 1/2 point is not as valuable as the ability to exploit a shortage of liberties or to protect against such exploits.
You are more advanced, but I suspect that the most practical study of the endgame for you would be endgame tesuji and shortage of liberties. Besides, you can quickly learn the basics of evaluation and classification.
Edit: Since you are interested in the endgame, do review your games backing up from the end. There is no reason for an SDK not to play the last moves on the board perfectly or nearly perfectly. Furthermore, you can usually work out best play yourself.
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
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gowan
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Re: The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
I don't know the book Get Strong at the Endgame. The book The Endgame, as I recall, is mostly about sente/gote and evaluating the size of moves. Another book that might be useful is Slate and Shell's 200 Endgame Problems by Shirae. It is almost entirely about endgame tesuji. There are many "standard" endgame tesuji which occur often. They are very useful to know because there are Knee-jerk type moves which amateurs often play when a standard tesuji could get them quite a few more points. 200 Endgame Problems is written for kyu players.
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Polama
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Re: The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
zac wrote:No ideas really about endgame tesuji or counting or anything.
The counting part is easy to fix. Just do it. Counting is one of those things most people know how to do even without playing Go =). In the endgame, you can often read right to the finalization of borders, so there's much less of the 'guess where borders will be drawn' involved in middle game counting. Read out where the borders are formed if you play first, if your opponent plays first and see what the territory difference is between the two. Now you know which gote move to take. Ignoring a sente-ish move can be harder to count, but if you can at least estimate what damage you'd take, you can play a bigger sente move in response to your opponent's move. The challenge is just in having the patience to do all the counting, but there's no reason you can't make correct moves fairly close to the end.
The conventional wisdom is that games our rank aren't usually decided within the margins of good endgame play, but I've certainly won and lost games by it. It can also be a confidence boost: knowing that you've got a better endgame than most players your rank can allow you to play calmly from a slight disadvantage rather than feeling forced into a desperate invasion.
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Bill Spight
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Re: The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
I think that an endgame counting problem would look something like this. 
How much territory does Black have in the corner?
(Hat Tip to lightvector.
)
How much territory does Black have in the corner?
(Hat Tip to lightvector.
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
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Re: The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
Bill Spight wrote:I think that an endgame counting problem would look something like this.
How much territory does Black have in the corner?
(Hat Tip to lightvector.)
"The more we think we know about
The greater the unknown"
Words by neil peart, music by geddy lee and alex lifeson
The greater the unknown"
Words by neil peart, music by geddy lee and alex lifeson
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zac
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Re: The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
Thank you all for your responses.
I guess I find the topic interesting, so, what's the harm in studying it if I like? I might leave 'The endgame' until later and consider picking up both GSA and 200 Endgame problems. Practicing counting certainly can't hurt, especially for being able to clearly visualise what the board will look like if I take a certain move or if my opponent takes a certain move. The tesuji will certainly help and will give me more much needed reading practice.
On a related note, I've started watching a few lectures from internetgoschool.com, and in the step by step course Guo gives a counting exercise at the end of the lecture.
As to the problem Bill posted;
I guess I find the topic interesting, so, what's the harm in studying it if I like? I might leave 'The endgame' until later and consider picking up both GSA and 200 Endgame problems. Practicing counting certainly can't hurt, especially for being able to clearly visualise what the board will look like if I take a certain move or if my opponent takes a certain move. The tesuji will certainly help and will give me more much needed reading practice.
On a related note, I've started watching a few lectures from internetgoschool.com, and in the step by step course Guo gives a counting exercise at the end of the lecture.
As to the problem Bill posted;
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Re: The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
Boidhre wrote:I haven't slept in 33 hours
Ah, so that's how one comes up with brilliant tesujis like black 1 in the first diagram.
Good thing I don't play when I'm that tired
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zac
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Re: The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
EDIT: Don't know what I was thinking.... see my later post for a more complete answer
Last edited by zac on Thu Jun 13, 2013 12:25 am, edited 3 times in total.
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Bill Spight
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Re: The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
White has three sente plays.
is the least complicated way.
leaves the two way ko threat involving
.
is another way.
gives Black the chance to make this blunder. Why is it a blunder?
gives Black the chance to make ko, if he has enough good enough ko threats. White can avoid the ko by jumping to 4. Assuming that Black can win the ko, who has normally made a mistake?Black has two reverse sente plays. The one on the left makes the standard assumption that the surrounding region is White territory. How much does the reverse sente gain? Which play is better in terms of ko threats? If ko threats do not matter, which play is better?
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
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Re: The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
reverse sente for black will not happen because white has right to the endgame.
it is meaningless to talk about what happens when black plays it first.
that is why there is only one answer which is 3 point for black.
it is meaningless to talk about what happens when black plays it first.
that is why there is only one answer which is 3 point for black.
"The more we think we know about
The greater the unknown"
Words by neil peart, music by geddy lee and alex lifeson
The greater the unknown"
Words by neil peart, music by geddy lee and alex lifeson
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RobertJasiek
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Re: The Endgame and Get Strong at the Endgame
The usual case is to assume White's privileges. Under exceptional global circumstances (such as currently Black to move and only tiny endgames available elsewhere), Black's reverse sente can occur. Therefore, in the general case, the set of solutions contains more than one answer.
is gote so it wouldn't be played. I think this is worth 4 points in gote to Black or if white gets the first move it's worth 3 to Black ending in gote for Black. Not that white would play
in the last diagram in either situation as it wastes a good ko threat. I haven't slept in 33 hours so this may be completely wrong.