RobertJasiek wrote:A great advantage of go is the linearity of scores: every adjacent two scores are 1 point apart. Hahn abandons this by making 10 points steps.
In normal Go the fact scores are 1 point apart all turns into the same binary win/loss as far as tournament results are concerned. So if you win by 13 points in normal Go and feel happy because 13 is your favourite number then your tournament result is a win and loses the information you won by 13. In Hahn Go if you win by 13 points you can also feel happy and then that information is also lost in the tournament scoring result of +70, but some information of the margin of victory is retained. So I didn't really understand the criticism here. Of course this splitting or results into buckets of 10 is actually an unnecessary one: you could say win by 0.5 is 60 points, 1.5 is 61, 2.5 is 62 etc all the way up to 40.5 or more is 100 points; let us call this Continuous-Hahn. I suspect they don't do this because it's a little more complex for the tournament organisers to record the results. Would RJ prefer Continuous-Hahn?
RobertJasiek wrote:Another great advantage of go is the open end of maximal scores. Hahn abandons this by setting a maximum; my ability to kill tremendous groups in tremendous moyos is punished.
Again, I don't see how Hahn is any worse than normal Go, in fact it's better. In normal Go if you kill a big group and win by 100 points then you can feel smug, and you just get a win on the tournament result sheet, the information of your large margin of victory is lost. In Hahn Go, you can also feel smug about your 100 point win, and you get a bigger win for the tournament score. In both cases your game record can say you won by 100.
RobertJasiek wrote: However, the main characteristic of go is the same result regardless of the size of the score.
Agreed.
RobertJasiek wrote:Hahn abandons this in order to invide[invite] taking increasingly great risks; however, one is not rewarded for playing for the greatest possible score but one is punished for the risk driven to its unreasonable limit.
In normal Go there is no reward (other than smugness etc) for going for a big win, so it seems a bit odd to complain about Hahn rewarding you for a 40 point win but not more for a 100 point.
Yes the discontinuity and cap at 40 is inelegant and we could debate other graph shapes for point margin vs scoring result instead of stepped linear that could make it a bit nicer and taper off for large wins, but that won't change the fact you are rewarded for winning with a bigger margin so it's a different game.