Javaness2 wrote:If you look at Japan or Korea, it seems that there are plenty of people playing there.
That's why, on average, it is much easier THERE to explain the game to beginners despite territory scoring.
Javaness2 wrote:If you look at Japan or Korea, it seems that there are plenty of people playing there.
jts wrote:I am aware of a class of L&D problems (and especially, endgame problems) where status and/or correct play depends on dame. And you're definitely right that, as you get higher and higher in the kyu grades, the problems you see are more likely to involve stones that could live, if not for a shortage of liberties situation that suddenly arises at the end of the game because a dame is filled. But for the vast majority of unsettled groups still on the board during scoring are not in 5k games, they are in 15k, 20k, 25k games. And these are groups that may have been unsettled since the opening!
RobertJasiek wrote:Javaness2 wrote:If you look at Japan or Korea, it seems that there are plenty of people playing there.
That's why, on average, it is much easier THERE to explain the game to beginners despite territory scoring.
John Fairbairn wrote:The true arguments between J and C rules are not to do with any of this, but with freak situations
And to those teachers who claim to have had bemused students under Japanese rules, did you simply tell them they could play on and see for themselves whether stones were really to be treated as dead or not?
Bantari wrote:the more I am convinced that the above is true.
The goal is to teach the student how to play and enjoy the game.RobertJasiek wrote:Bantari wrote:the more I am convinced that the above is true.
You have presumed a combination of teaching of the rules and teaching of basic strategy (life and death), haven't you?
hyperpape wrote:The goal is to teach the student how to play and enjoy the game.
RobertJasiek wrote:hyperpape wrote:The goal is to teach the student how to play and enjoy the game.
Nobody denies the fun aspect of go.
RobertJasiek wrote:Bantari wrote:the more I am convinced that the above is true.
You have presumed a combination of teaching of the rules and teaching of basic strategy (life and death), haven't you?
John Fairbairn wrote:Under Chinese rules an unconfident player can ploddingly kill off each group in a formal way by removing each liberty, but he does not get punished for this. Boo! This, along with filling in the dame, also drags the game out quite a bit, which can be an important factor in a club situation where someone else may be waiting to play, and where you try to get in, say, three games a night rather than two.
Also to be pointed out again: the BGA and AGA may have adopted AGA rules, but except in certain tournaments virtually nobody there uses them. They mostly stick with Japanese rules, and by choice not coercion (or, as with Ing rules, a form of bribery).
As Hermann says, go with the flow, use Japanese/Chinese/AGA/Korean rules, and put all your freed-up mental energy into being nice to that guy sitting patiently waiting to play.
At any rate it's a lot better than impersonating chicken-licken and rushing round saying the sky's going to fall in just because a friendly but otherwise utterly trivial game between two beginners very occasionally has an imperfect ending.
And to those teachers who claim to have had bemused students under Japanese rules, did you simply tell them they could play on and see for themselves whether stones were really to be treated as dead or not? Or did you, and not the rules, bemuse them polishing your own ego: pointing out that Black of course could have done this, or used that tesuji, even though it's hard to see except for an "expert like me"?
shapenaji wrote:This is a bit of a generalization, it may be true for BGA, but AGA rules have been used nearly universally at tournaments that I've attended within the last 6-7 years.
oren wrote:shapenaji wrote:This is a bit of a generalization, it may be true for BGA, but AGA rules have been used nearly universally at tournaments that I've attended within the last 6-7 years.
I think you attended a Seattle tournament that would have been run on Japanese rules. I don't think we've ever run one here with AGA rules that I've been to.
The only place I've ever played with AGA rules has been US Congress.
shapenaji wrote:That would have been pretty surprising given that it was for the AGA pro qualification, I vaguely remember handing a pass stone too... But I concede that that could be an artifact of my memory.