Evening all
Posted: Fri May 28, 2010 3:17 pm
Hello everyone.
I am (very) new to Go - I was in complete ignorance of its existence until the BBC Radio 4 programme on the game that went out recently. That led me to the British Go Association's introductory pages and in fairly short order to purchasing my own inexpensive set.
I have only played a handful of games - about four with a relative who was over staying recently, also new to the game, and one which I have just started intermittently playing against myself (with surprising ferocity, if very little skill). An interesting seki or seki-like situation seems to have come up in the first serious engagement of that game; maybe I'll post a sketch of it in the beginner's section at some point, to see if others agree (or, more likely, not) with my assessment of it.
I don't know how much time I'll have for Go in the near future - it is low down an overlong list of priorities, unfortunately. But it seems to engender a kind of serenity in concentration that other games (I'm thinking of chess, mainly) simply don't.
I am (very) new to Go - I was in complete ignorance of its existence until the BBC Radio 4 programme on the game that went out recently. That led me to the British Go Association's introductory pages and in fairly short order to purchasing my own inexpensive set.
I have only played a handful of games - about four with a relative who was over staying recently, also new to the game, and one which I have just started intermittently playing against myself (with surprising ferocity, if very little skill). An interesting seki or seki-like situation seems to have come up in the first serious engagement of that game; maybe I'll post a sketch of it in the beginner's section at some point, to see if others agree (or, more likely, not) with my assessment of it.
I don't know how much time I'll have for Go in the near future - it is low down an overlong list of priorities, unfortunately. But it seems to engender a kind of serenity in concentration that other games (I'm thinking of chess, mainly) simply don't.