- Am I safe?
- Is my opponent vulnerable?
- Where are the big points/advantages?
Does anyone have the complete list?
Araban wrote: 2. When your 3-3 or 4-4 stone is approached, respond (unless something else is urgent).
Phelan wrote:Araban wrote: 2. When your 3-3 or 4-4 stone is approached, respond (unless something else is urgent).
I thought one of the reasons for playing a 3-3 was that it could ignore an approach? Or is it the case that the approach is not so urgent as an approach on the other positions?
Phelan wrote:Ah, that makes sense. So what about my second hypothesis? A 3-3 is less urgent to approach because the other corners are usually more urgent?
Phelan wrote:Ah, that makes sense. So what about my second hypothesis? A 3-3 is less urgent to approach because the other corners are usually more urgent?
kirkmc wrote:To sum all that up to one sentence, as I have been told, you could say this:
Play urgent moves before big moves.
averell wrote:kirkmc wrote:To sum all that up to one sentence, as I have been told, you could say this:
Play urgent moves before big moves.
And I can further sum that up to "Play the biggest move." Still, step by step thinking recipes have their place.
SpongeBob wrote:averell wrote:kirkmc wrote:To sum all that up to one sentence, as I have been told, you could say this:
Play urgent moves before big moves.
And I can further sum that up to "Play the biggest move." Still, step by step thinking recipes have their place.
I think you meant to say "Play the best move." (This statement does not have any content, though.)
The point is the difference between 'urgent' (a move that is primarily related to safety, your own or your opponent's) and 'big' (a move that is primarily related to points).
averell wrote:No, I meant to say biggest. If urgent situations weren't also bigger point wise people would not play them. The distinction between big and urgent in go terms is artificial, and it's only useful in teaching people to watch the health of groups more, because they don't realize the related point swing otherwise.
averell wrote:kirkmc wrote:To sum all that up to one sentence, as I have been told, you could say this:
Play urgent moves before big moves.
And I can further sum that up to "Play the biggest move." Still, step by step thinking recipes have their place.
averell wrote:No, I meant to say biggest. If urgent situations weren't also bigger point wise people would not play them. The distinction between big and urgent in go terms is artificial, and it's only useful in teaching people to watch the health of groups more, because they don't realize the related point swing otherwise.