Bantari wrote:Why do you think Go is "superior"?
Hi Bantari, unfortunately I don't have any really deep, profound reasons --
I'm quite sure you've already heard of all of them:
I find the painting of Morgan Freeman beautiful. (It's not a photo; it's an iPad finger-painting by Kyle Lambert.)
I also find the pencil drawing beautiful. I think the painting is "better".
If I must come up with reasons for it, I can; but the assessment is instantaneous.
It's intuitively and immediately obvious to me. But if someone feels no way,
the pencil drawing is much better, then that's their opinion.
( I can also easily imagine some unique circumstances -- for example,
someone has a terrible accident that leaves them in a coma or paralyzed
for an extended period of time, and finally, through amazing care and hard work,
they regain their motor functions to the point where they can draw a happy face --
that's also very powerful, touching, and moving. And I can also appreciate
the pencil drawing with such a story.
But now, we imagine said person making the Freeman painting.

)
It's very similar with Go: the beauty, the elegance, and the depth are also
intuitively and immediately obvious to me.
The reasons (for me) only came afterwards:
- Chess represents a feudal society where people are divided into classes,
from the weakest and the lowest (the pawns), to the strongest and most powerful (the queen),
to the very bizarre combination of weak & infinitely important (the king).
(It goes without saying this is true also of XiangQi and Shogi,
since they all came from some ancient Indian source.)
In Go, all the pieces start out equal; I find this more beautiful. - Chess starts with all the pieces set at prearranged positions.
In ancient Chinese Go, they also used to preset certain
and
stones,
but later, Japan freed up this requirement.
This one is more arbitrary, but I find the empty Go board more beautiful. - In Chess, different pieces have different rules.
These rules, naturally, have changed slightly over the years.
I seem to remember reading somewhere that the last rule added was the en passant ?
Casting aside the unresolved Go rules unification (between China, Korea, and Japan),
I find the rules of Go much more elegant and beautiful. - I hope in our lifetime, we see the computer beat the top Go pros (top pros having to take handi stones!).
Deep Blue beat Kasparov in 1997; it was one reason I lost interest in chess
and got interested in Go a little later.
(Of course, people are still very enthusiastic about chess; with prodigies like Carlsen, etc.) - Chess is all or nothing (kill the king; or a draw
).
Go is more "sharing." This one is a wash because as we know, both are actually super nasty. 
I can probably come up with "more," but once again,
these conscious factors came afterwards; for me,
the beauty and the elegance of Go were a gut instinct, instantaneous and immediate.