With my knowledge of the English language, the expression "both players pass twice in succession" can mean two things:10) Disputes: If the players disagree about the status of a group of stones left on the board after both have passed, play is resumed [...] The game is over when the players agree on the status of all groups on the board, or, failing such agreement, if both players pass twice in succession. [...]
- 4 pass moves in a row
- 2 pass moves, followed by 1-n stone-placing moves, followed by another 2 pass moves
In the PDF, the text in curly braces that adds explanation to the boldfaced rule text certainly seems to indicate that meaning 1 (4 pass moves in a row) is intended. If that is indeed the case, then what about rule 11 which states "white must make the last move"? Because with 4 pass moves in a row we could have Wpass-Bpass-Wpass-Bpass, i.e. black moving last. As far as I understand, such a sequence would also defeat the purpose of pass stones under territory scoring (rule 7).
Or am I reading the text too literal here and I should understand rule 10 to mean this?
- 2 or 3 passes (depending on who starts passing)
- followed by scoring + dispute
- followed by Black passing and White passing
Patrick