The barrier between DDK and SDK.
- Knotwilg
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
They don't seem to have a problem with it.Knotwilg wrote:Just imagine the stronger players also vow never to play DDK.
Thinking like a go player during a game of chess is like bringing a knife to a gun-fight. Thinking like a chess player during a game of go feels like getting knifed while you're holding a gun...
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Bill Spight
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
SDKs are not going to pick up bad habits from DDKs.Knotwilg wrote:Just imagine the stronger players also vow never to play DDK.
The Adkins Principle:
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
At some point, doesn't thinking have to go on?
— Winona Adkins
Visualize whirled peas.
Everything with love. Stay safe.
- oren
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
Play stronger players when you can and play equal when you can't.Joelnelsonb wrote:So tell me what you think: I've decided (among reading more of the proper material for my level and doing more life and death) that I'm going to quit playing DDKs. Even if I never win a game for a long time, I want to always play against better players until I can hang with them. Before, I would set my challenges to be open to anyone a little lower and a little higher than my current rank. This means that if I played poorly for a while and dropped a few kyus, I would adjust the rank restriction accordingly and play weaker players until I got back up. I'm wondering if the community thinks this will be productive or if maybe there's something to be said about playing both stronger and weaker players.
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cyndane
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
It's important to play both stronger and weaker players in order to improve. Stronger players are better at punishing your mistakes, but they are better at hiding their weaknesses. Playing weaker players allows you to see their weaknesses very clearly. Try playing strong opponents and then going back to weaker players, you will be surprised at the differences you see. Alternating like this you can build skills into your repertoire and become a better player.
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DrStraw
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
Absolutely essential that everyone does this otherwise no one will improve.oren wrote:Play stronger players when you can and play equal when you can't.
Still officially AGA 5d but I play so irregularly these days that I am probably only 3d or 4d over the board (but hopefully still 5d in terms of knowledge, theory and the ability to contribute).
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schawipp
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
If you do that on KGS you will eventually get a '~' besides your nickname in the game request window. With a '~' it might get more difficult getting games against stronger players. Also consider, if every player wants to play only stronger players, there won't be any games at all...[...] I want to always play against better players until I can hang with them [...]
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xed_over
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
That's just a stupid logical fallacy.schawipp wrote: Also consider, if every player wants to play only stronger players, there won't be any games at all...
- Knotwilg
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
It's a logical truth. It might be a practical fallacy.xed_over wrote:That's just a stupid logical fallacy.schawipp wrote: Also consider, if every player wants to play only stronger players, there won't be any games at all...
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schawipp
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
Could is just be (poorly marked, I know...) irony?Knotwilg wrote: It's a logical truth. It might be a practical fallacy.
On a more serious note I know some players who play very often stronger players with handycap. In those games they play like around 8k while on tournaments in even games they are rather playing like 10k. Thus, playing only stronger opponents might be too single-sided but I really don't know...
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Pio2001
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
Hi,
I've been stuck at 9 kyu for 8 months, and I only just broke the 8 kyu barrier.
I've studied opening theory, but maybe I became good at that, but too weak at everything else.
So I tried to solve Tsumegos, but I didn't seem to be very good at that. Maybe my book was too difficult.
So I tried to improve my reading, but it seemed to have no effect.
Eventually, things got better. Difficult to know exactly how. Maybe all these efforts combined eventually built up and gave something...
But there is a little something that might have unlocked my understanding : one day, I was playing my daily KGS game, and the automatch found me a 5 kyu opponent (I set the automatch to play only players + or - 4 kyus from my level). I must have been 8 kyu at the time, so I got 3 stones.
First move of white : one intersection in diagonal from the tengen !
I ignore it and take the fourth corner.
Second move of white, somewhere on the 5 or 6th line !
And the game went on... and white eventually won... and he reviewed my game. Besides the opening, his moves were perfectly logical, except that he just didn't seem to care about taking the corners or the edges. I had the feeling that I was playing a 1+ dan player just toying with a kgs account to try weird openings.
And this game review made me understand a lot of things about the "direction of play". I already knew the theoretical principles because I read them in books, but to see them applied completely outside any traditionnal fuseki, above the 4th line of the goban, made me "feel" them, as if I was understanding them for the first time.
Maybe it was because I was seeing them applied alone, without involving any extra considerations such as playing the right extension, or playing on the right line, that were usually drawing all my attention and preventing me to see beyond.
So I confirm that having one's game reviewed is something good, and I'd add that having them reviewed by a really strong player is even more interesting.
I've been stuck at 9 kyu for 8 months, and I only just broke the 8 kyu barrier.
I've studied opening theory, but maybe I became good at that, but too weak at everything else.
So I tried to solve Tsumegos, but I didn't seem to be very good at that. Maybe my book was too difficult.
So I tried to improve my reading, but it seemed to have no effect.
Eventually, things got better. Difficult to know exactly how. Maybe all these efforts combined eventually built up and gave something...
But there is a little something that might have unlocked my understanding : one day, I was playing my daily KGS game, and the automatch found me a 5 kyu opponent (I set the automatch to play only players + or - 4 kyus from my level). I must have been 8 kyu at the time, so I got 3 stones.
First move of white : one intersection in diagonal from the tengen !
I ignore it and take the fourth corner.
Second move of white, somewhere on the 5 or 6th line !
And the game went on... and white eventually won... and he reviewed my game. Besides the opening, his moves were perfectly logical, except that he just didn't seem to care about taking the corners or the edges. I had the feeling that I was playing a 1+ dan player just toying with a kgs account to try weird openings.
And this game review made me understand a lot of things about the "direction of play". I already knew the theoretical principles because I read them in books, but to see them applied completely outside any traditionnal fuseki, above the 4th line of the goban, made me "feel" them, as if I was understanding them for the first time.
Maybe it was because I was seeing them applied alone, without involving any extra considerations such as playing the right extension, or playing on the right line, that were usually drawing all my attention and preventing me to see beyond.
So I confirm that having one's game reviewed is something good, and I'd add that having them reviewed by a really strong player is even more interesting.
- Knotwilg
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
I'm happy you shared this epiphany and I remain puzzled that so many enthusiastic students of the game have such high hopes of studying the opening, especially fixed patterns. If you're strong at L&D or the endgame, it doesn't matter a great deal if you're strong at the opening, as long as you don't violate basic strategic concepts such as cutting and connecting, avoiding to be sealed in or playing away from strong stones, and likewise play good technnique like a hane against an attachment. No disasters will happen, you can fully concentrate on the basics and most importantly you will not delude yourself that a winning streak is near because you just completed a book on the chinese fuseki, and neither will you feel that victory is morally yours because the opponent plays an unusual opening.Pio2001 wrote:Hi,
I've been stuck at 9 kyu for 8 months, and I only just broke the 8 kyu barrier.
I've studied opening theory, but maybe I became good at that, but too weak at everything else.
(...)
First move of white : one intersection in diagonal from the tengen !
I ignore it and take the fourth corner.
Second move of white, somewhere on the 5 or 6th line !
And the game went on... and white eventually won...
(...)
I was cured from this disease early in my go career, when Pierre Colmez 5d played his final game in the Brussels tournament against Guo Juan and placed his first 4 stones on 7-7. While everybody was chuckling, Guo concentrated very hard, since she was aware of the danger to overestimate the advantage of conventional play and also these 4 stones where already "thick" in some way.
Enjoy real go!
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Pio2001
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
One of the reasons is that very often, in real life, when good players comments my games, they focus on the opening, and then conclude with a "no need to go further"... maybe because they can't remember the next movesKnotwilg wrote:I remain puzzled that so many enthusiastic students of the game have such high hopes of studying the opening,
- Knotwilg
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
They may be better players then but they don't know whyPio2001 wrote:One of the reasons is that very often, in real life, when good players comments my games, they focus on the opening, and then conclude with a "no need to go further"... maybe because they can't remember the next movesKnotwilg wrote:I remain puzzled that so many enthusiastic students of the game have such high hopes of studying the opening,
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zedmango
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Re: The barrier between DDK and SDK.
That sounds like a really helpful review. Did you save the file? Would you be willing to share it? I'd like to look at it.Pio2001 wrote:Hi,
I've been stuck at 9 kyu for 8 months, and I only just broke the 8 kyu barrier.
I've studied opening theory, but maybe I became good at that, but too weak at everything else.
So I tried to solve Tsumegos, but I didn't seem to be very good at that. Maybe my book was too difficult.
So I tried to improve my reading, but it seemed to have no effect.
Eventually, things got better. Difficult to know exactly how. Maybe all these efforts combined eventually built up and gave something...
But there is a little something that might have unlocked my understanding : one day, I was playing my daily KGS game, and the automatch found me a 5 kyu opponent (I set the automatch to play only players + or - 4 kyus from my level). I must have been 8 kyu at the time, so I got 3 stones.
First move of white : one intersection in diagonal from the tengen !
I ignore it and take the fourth corner.
Second move of white, somewhere on the 5 or 6th line !
And the game went on... and white eventually won... and he reviewed my game. Besides the opening, his moves were perfectly logical, except that he just didn't seem to care about taking the corners or the edges. I had the feeling that I was playing a 1+ dan player just toying with a kgs account to try weird openings.
And this game review made me understand a lot of things about the "direction of play". I already knew the theoretical principles because I read them in books, but to see them applied completely outside any traditionnal fuseki, above the 4th line of the goban, made me "feel" them, as if I was understanding them for the first time.
Maybe it was because I was seeing them applied alone, without involving any extra considerations such as playing the right extension, or playing on the right line, that were usually drawing all my attention and preventing me to see beyond.
So I confirm that having one's game reviewed is something good, and I'd add that having them reviewed by a really strong player is even more interesting.