uPWarrior wrote:I decided to gather some data so that we can answer this question in the way that, for me, makes the most sense.
I started by downloading the FIDE list of all players standard ratings (243252 players, found at http://ratings.fide.com/download.phtml) and the EGF list of all players who have participated in any tournament (38928 players, found at http://www.europeangodatabase.eu/EGD/EG ... system.php).
The question now is: someone who is better than 50% of the chess players, what EGF rank should they reach in order to be better than 50% of the go players as well?
The next figure shows the FIDE vs EGF same-percentile isoline. It shows the rating that players need to have in both systems in order to achieve the same relative position in the respective populations.
According to this comparison, an EGF 10k (rating 1100) is equivalent to a FIDE 1800 player, a EGF 1d (rating 2100) is equivalent to a FIDE 2170 (expert), a FIDE master (rating 2300) corresponds to a EGF 4d and a FIDE grandmaster (2500) corresponds to an EGF rating of 2800 (EGF 7d is at 2700).
The EGF 10k = FIDE 1800 might be the most surprising comparison, the rest seems acceptable to me. We might be skewed to believe that 10k is easy to reach, or maybe this says something about the data sources.
(I had to remove everyone with a EGF rating of 100, as 5500 players clustered at this exact rating)
Could you somehow compare this data to goratings.org site?