The longest one that I have been able to find is 76-moves, stemming from the large avalanche.

Thank-you in advance.
-Logan
EDIT: Updated image file location.

Pros don't play joseki. They just play good moves.HermanHiddema wrote:If that's joseki, why can't I find it in any pro game in my database? (GoGoD from Dec 2009)
Doesn't that mean that your opponent made a mistake?zecv wrote:For my purposes, it only counts as a joseki if it is good for me.
Plenty of pros play moves that aren't joseki and are criticized for it. You can't go by what has been played in pro games a few times. Whether a move sequence is "joseki" or not is not an absolute thing but depends on the general judgement of pros and changes according to fashion and the discovery of new moves. That's why you can't trust dictionaries too much. Something might be considered joseki when the dictionary was written but then professional opinion changes a few years later. Of course, many "non-joseki" moves only lose a couple of points, which would be fatal for a pro but not for most amateurs. However, consider losing, say, three points per joseki "mistake" several times during a game. That could add up to over ten points difference, something that could fall within the range of a game changing mistake for amateurs.daniel_the_smith wrote:For my purposes, it only counts as a joseki if more than one pro has actually played it in a game.
The "equal local result" part is misleading (I would even question whether there is such a thing as a "local result"). "Joseki" just means "fixed stones", in other words, a known sequence that is under fitting circumstances playable by both players.gowan wrote:[...] ignoring the real meaning of the term as a sequence of moves generally considered (by pros) to give an equal local result.
Not only that, but joseki as a term has much wider meaning than just Go. It's meaning is closer to "routine sequence" as I understand it.Harleqin wrote:The "equal local result" part is misleading (I would even question whether there is such a thing as a "local result"). "Joseki" just means "fixed stones", in other words, a known sequence that is under fitting circumstances playable by both players.gowan wrote:[...] ignoring the real meaning of the term as a sequence of moves generally considered (by pros) to give an equal local result.