http://www.worldmindgames.net/en/sports ... ts-0-15302
Go is introduced using the text on wikipedia.
How can they shame us like this :'(
Once placed on the board, stones cannot be moved, but they may be turned over.
Bill Spight wrote:This text illustrates the Othello Syndrome:Once placed on the board, stones cannot be moved, but they may be turned over.
Boywing wrote:This URL can be anything...
http://www.worldmindgames.net/en/sports ... !_-0-15302
Javaness2 wrote:Go is introduced using the text on wikipedia.
How can they shame us like this :'(
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Go_(game) wrote:Go has been used as a subject or plot device in film, such as π, A Beautiful Mind and Tron: Legacy.
snorri wrote:Bill Spight wrote:This text illustrates the Othello Syndrome:Once placed on the board, stones cannot be moved, but they may be turned over.
In a way, that's true. It's just not interesting.But it looks like this has been corrected on the original link already. No?
Bill Spight wrote:This text illustrates the Othello Syndrome:Once placed on the board, stones cannot be moved, but they may be turned over.
tundra wrote:Bill Spight wrote:This text illustrates the Othello Syndrome:Once placed on the board, stones cannot be moved, but they may be turned over.
Actually, I wonder... turning over one stone might be made to serve a useful purpose, as another way of signalling a pass.