I Just wanted to play go on a doughnut
what have i started ?
my 2 cents on the infinite board notion:
To me "good" komi on a finite board is the score difference between the 2 sides after perfect play. You may disagree .
It is reasonable to believe that it converges to something if the board size grows toward infinity (but it might converge to different values for even and odd board for example, and for periodic boundary conditions vs open BC), but it does NOT mean that the value obtained has anything to do with play on a truly infinite board.
On a finite board you can count the number of legal postions, and theorically at least define perfect play for both side, and thus define an ideal komi (according to my definition of komi above) . on an infinite board i do not even see how you would define perfect play, hence every other question is moot iMHO
You cannot even exhaust all games of less than say x moves to try to reach a meaningful limit

.
(By that i mean that if you consider a ruleset than gemerates an infinite number of legal games but a finite number of games of N moves or less you can at least try to define best play for games of length less than N moves and try to come to a limit by taking N to infinity . A toy example would be for example a game of go on an infinite board when W must alway plays at less than a fixed distance from an existing B stone: in that case the number of possible games of length less than N is finite even though the total number of games as N goes to infinity is infinite )
It makes my think of another toy game
contact go: you have to always play a contact move (except obvisously first B move), ie each move must be to the contact onf one your opponet stone or one of your own.
i guess computer would be real good at it a the number of plays would be reduced. in fact that is almost what they play with monte carlo go if i understood correclty as they have automatic reply to a number of set patterns on a 3x3 grid (is that correct ?)
Someone wanna try that on a 9x9 (periodic or not)?
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is.