nagano wrote:Flaws are situations that cause the game to terminate prematurely, or, in the case of Chess, which cause an imbalance between piece types.
The problem here again, is that this is all your opinion. For example, are all players going to agree what ending prematurely means? If player A is a genius who figures out how to beat player B on the 15th move, is that premature? What about a draw after the 100th move? As for the imbalance between piece types, that is part of the basic point in the game.
Essentially, you have decided that anything you don't enjoy about a specific game is a flaw. The problem is that others don't see those things as flaws, but as features or even strengths in the game.
You mean the rules don't lead to things you consider to be flaws. To someone who loves checkers, Go might appeared flawed.
But flaws are functional issues with the game.
Ok, but define functional issues that are flaws as opposed to those which are not? I could argue that the need for komi in Go is a functional issue; while it at least approaches making the game balanced, it has the feeling of a patch over a flaw, rather than a truly elegant solution. Your argument in support of flaws comes down to, if I don't like it, it is a flaw.
Now, I am not saying you are wrong to have your preference. We all do, but there are many, many dedicated chess, shogi, xianqi, etc. players who might argue that we are wrong to like a game where victory is determined by counting at the end of the game.
Well, blocked positions are usually the result of too small a board or poor piece design.
I am not sure I buy that. Go after all, does need special rules to resolve some Ko issues after all and in practical terms, Go has the largest board of traditional abstract strategy games (at least that I know of!).Yes, but just because we are too dumb, does not mean it is not simple.I am not sure I agree with things getting less complex at smaller scales. The quantum world present us with a weird array of sub atomic particles, most of which can only be detected with the aid of a super collider, and if string theory is right, they may exist as 11 dimensional objects. The fact really understanding any of it requires advanced math that most people never learn.The universe actually appears to get simpler the smaller the scale; but many simple systems interacting can lead to an appearance of great complexity. Really the only reason anything seems complex is because our brains cannot hold it all.
It doesn't mean it is simple either.
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Bill