Territory as an emergent property of capture go
When I first heard about capture go, I thought that it might engender the bad habit of just trying to capture stones instead of making territory. When I realized that territory is implicit in capture go, I changed my mind.
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[go]$$ Territory?
$$ -----------
$$ | X . . . . |
$$ | X X X X X |
$$ | X O X O X |
$$ | O O O O O |
$$ | O . . O . |
$$ -----------[/go]
Now, in regular go we count this as 4 points of territory for Black and 3 points for White. Black wins by 1 point. What is the concept of territory in capture go?
In this position note that a safe play by each player reduces the number of safe plays left for that player by one (assuming correct play). Therefore the players can count the number of safe plays left for each player and determine the result of the game without playing it out. That is, they can score the game.

Black has 2 safe plays left and White has 1, so the net score is 1 play for Black. Black wins by 1 play, or, IOW, by 1 point.
Note that each player has 2 fewer points in capture go than in regular go. That is because of the group tax. Each player needs 2 points for each group to keep it from being in atari.
Even though it is not in the rules, the players can agree to stop play when they reach a scorable position and count the territory. Because territory is an emergent property of capture go, ending the game by agreement is also an emergent property of capture go. (We can amend the rules to allow that possibility.) Pace Chen, it is not necessary to assume that the concept of territory arose as a means of equivalence scoring as a convenience for stone scoring. The concepts of territory and group tax emerge together from capture go.
- Click Here To Show Diagram Code
[go]$$ Evaluation?
$$ -----------
$$ | X . . . 1 |
$$ | X X X X X |
$$ | X O X O X |
$$ | O O O O O |
$$ | O . . O . |
$$ -----------[/go]
How do we evaluate the position after

? White has 1 point (safe move) on the bottom side. On the top side each player has 1 safe move to a position worth 0. It is like a dame, with a count of 0. White is now 1 point ahead, and the correct play is in the "dame" on the top side to leave White still 1 point ahead.