According to the test, my "style" is flexible (more likely, clueless
In any case, I would be interested in hearing from others what style they were assigned and what study advice they were given.
emeraldemon wrote:I'm just a scrub, but my personal opinion is that amateurs think way too much about their "style". I've said this elsewhere, but I'm pretty sure the only word that describes my own style of go is "terrible". Just try to find the best move on the board. Sometimes that will be a territory move, sometimes an attacking move, sometimes a defending move. Usually you will play every kind of move at some point in each game.
Even Takemiya, who has one of the most distinctive styles in go, never described himself that way. He always said he played the moves that felt natural to him. Maybe part of the problem is that many (most?) beginners go through a phase of underestimating the importance of influence, ignoring it to take territory early. But I don't think that's really a "territorial style", I think that's just poor play (which I myself am often guilty of). If you tell yourself "oh I have a territorial style" maybe you are just giving yourself an excuse not to look for the best move.
emeraldemon wrote:I'm just a scrub, but my personal opinion is that amateurs think way too much about their "style". I've said this elsewhere, but I'm pretty sure the only word that describes my own style of go is "terrible". Just try to find the best move on the board. Sometimes that will be a territory move, sometimes an attacking move, sometimes a defending move. Usually you will play every kind of move at some point in each game.
Abyssinica wrote:"Amateurs are bad so they shouldn't focus on X or Y or think Z" type comments are the worst.
emeraldemon wrote:Abyssinica wrote:"Amateurs are bad so they shouldn't focus on X or Y or think Z" type comments are the worst.
But do you think pros worry about what style they have?
emeraldemon wrote:Abyssinica wrote:"Amateurs are bad so they shouldn't focus on X or Y or think Z" type comments are the worst.
But do you think pros worry about what style they have?
Loons wrote:I'm fairly sure flexible means you got all the questions right.
Abyssinica wrote:Professionals play to put food on the table; amateurs do not. Because of that, amateurs are free to worry about whatever aspect of go in whatever they want without fear that they won't be able to eat the next day.
Abyssinica wrote:Fuseki is my favourite part of the game