Studying Strategy

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Kirby
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Studying Strategy

Post by Kirby »

Up until now, I have held to the idea that being strong means being able to read more moves ahead. If I can outperform my opponent in the local tesujis and life and death problems on the board, then I can win the game. I've pretty much held to that philosophy.

The two recent Malkovich games that I've started up are, I think, the first slow turn-based games that I've played (by myself, that is. Last year we had a forum-wide game, if I recall). Since the games are so slow, it seems that reading ability is less of an issue. Theoretically, both sides have enough time to read out any local life and death or tesuji situations (in theory, that is ;)). This has made me realize that I'm probably pretty weak at strategy (not to say that I'm perfect at reading - this is just speaking in relative terms).

How can I improve upon my global strategy? One idea I can think of is to study pro games, but I've always "felt" more efficient in learning when doing go problems. What do you guys think?
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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by Phelan »

Try doing whole board problems? Those should help with strategy, I think.

I have no idea what to recommend to you though. Though I've seen some people say good things about 501 opening problems, I've also seen people say bad things about it.

Or you could try playing a mixed game with a new account: you only play until midgame, and then let mogo or some other bot take over. The idea is that you can't win through tactics, you'd have to have a good position before it gets to that.

Of course, you're much stronger than me, so I could be way off.
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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by SoDesuNe »

I think the first step is, knowing which groups are strong and weak (includes knowing where good points for invading/reduction are), where the big points are and which potential follow-ups they have (like approaching a corner and chose a specific Joseki or splitting a side).
Then I think, one has to be clear, if one is ahead in territory (counting) or influence and play accordingly (attack with influence for instance - see above: knowing weak points).

And all this in every single move ^^
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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by Bill Spight »

I got a lot out of studying Takagawa, but I don't know of much by him that is in print in English. I can recommend studying pro games. :)

Here is an idea, based on some advice by Jowa:

Play over pro games up to around move 100. Pause at move 30 or so, and move 50 or so. At each of these three points, assess the position and try to predict future territory. Then go to the end of the game and see how well you did.

Good luck! :)
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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by ketchup »

Kirby wrote:Up until now, I have held to the idea that being strong means being able to read more moves ahead. If I can outperform my opponent in the local tesujis and life and death problems on the board, then I can win the game. I've pretty much held to that philosophy.


I agree with this. I do not think you are wrong in taking this stance.

Learning strategy is for 9ds. Learning to push yourself to read out further than what you think is necessary should take priority. Now if only I could follow my own words.
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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by MagicMagor »

Learning strategy is for 9ds. Learning to push yourself to read out further than what you think is necessary should take priority.

I don't think it's this extreme.
I think tactical strength(=reading) and strategic strength are both needed to become strong. If you neglet one part you will hit a road block sooner or later.
Wether someone should improve his reading or his strategic thinking depends on the overall playing strength of the person and of course his personal strength in these areas. If he is already strong at reading, but weak at strategy, studying a bit of strategy is the right choice. I doubt you can breach into the dan-ranks by reading alone.

@topic
Try reading some books, theory mixed with some problems. I found "Attack&Defense" really helped my middle-game even though i suck at reading.
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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by Magicwand »

i find you problem to be a lack of experience.
only way you can improve is to play many games as possible with stronger players ONLY.
if you desire i can play you game after game so you can have more experience.
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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by mdobbins »

Phelan wrote:Try doing whole board problems? Those should help with strategy, I think.


Play on a turn based server with just a few more games than you can keep in your head at once, then each move is a real life whole board problem.
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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by Kirby »

Magicwand wrote:i find you problem to be a lack of experience.
only way you can improve is to play many games as possible with stronger players ONLY.
if you desire i can play you game after game so you can have more experience.


Awesome! I might take you up on this.
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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by Kirby »

Thanks for the other tips, everyone.
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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by Jedo »

ketchup wrote:
Learning strategy is for 9ds. Learning to push yourself to read out further than what you think is necessary should take priority.



I don't really agree with this. It doesn't matter how well you can read if you don't know what you're trying to read out. It's a sense of strategy and direction of plays that tells what you're looking for.
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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by topazg »

Jedo wrote:I don't really agree with this. It doesn't matter how well you can read if you don't know what you're trying to read out. It's a sense of strategy and direction of plays that tells what you're looking for.


I agree with you 100% Jedo. Strategy is utterly vital. Fighting is necessary, and will always happen when you're ahead because your opponent should start fights, so you need to read too, but strategy is key... why do you think "Direction of Play" and "Attack and Defense" are such highly regarded books?
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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by Phelan »

I have an account where I only play by instinct.

It usually gets a better rating than my normal account, where I take the time to read things out, and try to play more normally. :-?
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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by Vesa »

I just wonder if the weakish japanese/chinese/korean amateur players ponder the same things as here. It seems totally ridiculous to me that you can win the game by a superior strategy if your tactics suck compared to your opponent.

I repeat: you can have the self-betraying feeling that your strategy is ok, but if you ever fail to read deeper than your opponent, you're in trouble.

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Re: Studying Strategy

Post by xed_over »

Magicwand wrote:only way you can improve is to play many games as possible with stronger players ONLY.

oh no, but then he'll get the dreaded scarlet tilde ~
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