tentano wrote:Actually, some people give handicaps and then do a weird, unreasonable and actually very bad opening,
Uhm. I’m afraid I may be one of that “some people” whenever I play against HC.
but because their weaker opponent has no idea what to do, they will founder and lose very badly.
It's not merely a trick play, it can really disrupt the weaker player.
Pardon me? IF I play that way, it doesn’t feel to me like “trick play”, it just seems to be a way to win even though I’m playing against an overwhelming number of B stones.
Things like doing the 3-3 invasion in EVERY corner,
Okay, that’s probably rare for me …
playing 5-5 or 2-3, or 5-4 as first move at 4-4 stones.
… but 5-5 and 5-4 I have done before, usually because of my megalomaniac ambitions regarding a huge moyo in the centre and/or a side.
(See? The “and” in “and/or” proves the megalomania, no?
)
Though, this sort of thing feels more like plain harassment to me.
I know how it feels since I’ve also experienced it the other way ’round, but I do NOT take them personally, as in “the other player is evil person and has something against me personally”, but rather like “Oh, now I must
fight to win. What a (not) surprise.”
They're legal moves, but the only reason they are used is because the stronger player seeks to mess with the weaker player's head.
This is merely an assumption, and IMHO it is tunnel vision: when I’m drowning deep down in the well, all I can see is that tiny circle of sky above me, and the high walls all around me.
Re: “only reason they are used is because the stronger player seeks to mess with the weaker player's head” — Couldn’t it just as well be that the other player is …
desperate? There’s also this proverb that says “if you are behind, try to complicate the game”. And White is ALWAYS behind in the beginning when White plays against HC stones. The difference shrinks, of course, as the game progresses, but don’t ever believe that it is a cheesecake for a stronger W player to play a B player with appropriate HC settings.