19x19 game with most moves
Posted: Sat Jan 03, 2015 10:15 pm
What u got? Is there an offical record holder?
Life in 19x19. Go, Weiqi, Baduk... Thats the life.
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What the ...Uberdude wrote:I saw some guy play a game on KGS with around 30 thousand moves.
Yes, I find the same games when one is restricted to pro games in well-known tournaments. Here a 417-move record of a game between Ohashi Hirofumi, 4p and Mizuma Toshifumi, 7p, found on a blog.John Fairbairn wrote:The 2nd longest in Japan is 406 moves in 1996.
The longest in Korea is 384 in 1984.
The longest in China appears to be 394 in 2013.
The longest international game is 392 moves in 2013.
I'm aware of it, as it's on Ohashi's blog. But there he says (a) it was a study group game, and (b) he was recording it on his site "while I can remember it", which implies a possibility of mistakes in remembering (the same remark may be made about the 411 move game, BTW), and (3) in that connection there is a 308 move version floating around, which maybe is as far as they got with reliable moves. Also, as there's always an element of larking about in study groups, were they going for the record?Yes, I find the same games when one is restricted to pro games in well-known tournaments. Here a 417-move record of a game between Ohashi Hirofumi, 4p and Mizuma Toshifumi, 7p, found on a blog.
30000 moves!? That is like 150 usual games on end. I assume they were using a rules set that allowed them to have a repetitive position.Uberdude wrote:I saw some guy play a game on KGS with around 30 thousand moves. But maybe you mean serious game in a professional tournament? And official by the authority of what office?
I hope that was done with a program, otherwise I feel sorry for this person.Uberdude wrote:I should clarify it was a game against himself with the sole purpose of trying to play as many moves as possible, rather than to win. Normal ruleset. His approach was basically to make a snake of 180 stones in atari, capture them, then 179, capture them, and so on. Sum of 1 to 180 is 180*181*0.5 is about 16200, double that gets you about 30000.
They fill in the teire, too, which in classic games seems to have been often been left as an exercise to the reader. I guess we're lucky to have old records at all and shouldn't complain if the game recorder glanced over the board at move 180, mumbled, "looks like B+2" and went off for some sake. (That's only how it happens in my imagination, BTW and is not the result of extensive research.Bill Spight wrote:Yasui Sanchi vs. Ito Matsujiro has a game record from 1839 with 405 plays. (Black 405 takes a ko, which Black will win.)
Yamabe Toshiro vs. Hoshino Toshi has a game record from 1950 with 411 plays. (Black 411 also takes a ko which Black will win.)
I think that there has been a longer pro game with territory scoring since then, but I am not sure. OC, nowadays everybody fills the dame, so games are longer, eh?