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SunjangBaduk
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Sunjang Baduk Counting
   

The old Korean variant of Go called Sunjang Baduk used a different kind of territory Scoring and a special Counting procedure:

After the game all stones inside a player's area are removed, except the stones that form its boundary. No stone in the boundary can be in atari, but there can be cutting points. The surrounded open points are the territory. No points are counted in seki, however.

Example:

[Diagram]
Diag.: 1) Board before counting

The marked stones are removed, leaving the boundaries.


[Diagram]
Diag.: 2) Ready for counting

Black has 29 points of territory and White has 31. White wins by 2 points.



Note that, unlike JapaneseScoring but like ChineseScoring, a play inside one's territory costs nothing. (OC, there may be a better play.) This means that almost all questions of life and death may be resolved by play, greatly reducing the necessity for [special rulings|JapaneseScoringSpecialRulings].

But territory scoring is, in general, sharper than area scoring. For instance, by Japanese counting Black may have only one option that wins by 1 point, while another results in jigo, while by Chinese scoring either option is just as good, because if Black ties in territory, he will get the last Japanese dame and still win by 1 point. There is no direct comparison between Korean and Chinese scoring, but Korean counting retains the sharpness of territory scoring. It is easier to make a misstep.


Vive la difference!

[Diagram]
Diag.: 3) Black to play

By JapaneseScoring, the ko at a is worth 1/3 point by MiaiCounting, and b is just a dame, worth 0. By ChineseScoring, a is worth 1 1/3 point and b is worth 1 point. (As a rule, the miai value of a play is one point more by ChineseScoring than by JapaneseScoring.) Korean counting usually comes in between the two (inclusive).

If Black fills the ko at a the marked Black stone is removed and that point becomes territory. If White takes and wins the ko, the two adjacent marked White stones are removed and become territory. The difference between winning and losing the ko is thus 3 points, and the ko has a miai value of 1 point.

If Black plays at b the 2 adjacent marked White stones are part of White's boundary, but if White plays there, they become territory. The miai value of a play at b is also 1 point.

As with Chinese scoring, Black's best play is at b, since he can win the ko later, but the play does not have the same unorthodox flavor that it has with Chinese scoring.


[Diagram]
Diag.: 4) Black to play

B 5 takes ko. W 6 = pass. B 7 fills.


[Diagram]
Diag.: 5) Territory

Black has 29 points of territory, as does White. Result: Jigo.



-- BillSpight


I have taken the liberty of numbering Bill Spight's diagrams. I am trying to understand miai and deiri counting etc. -- sounds interesting, but i'm having trouble getting a handle on it. Anyway, here's my question: With this Korean Sunjang Baduk counting -- in diagram 3 above, if Black fills the ko at a, is it not two Black stones that are removed (and their points become territory) -- the marked stone, and the one above it? Whereas, if White wins and fills the ko, Black gets neither of those points as territory? Does this make the difference between winning and losing the ko 4 points, rather than 3? Or am i completely confused about this? Thanks, - TakeNGive 10k


Bill:

I find Korean counting confusing, too. :-)

In the following diagrams, for simplicity I have let Black have the play at the bottom.

First, suppose that Black wins the ko.

[Diagram]
Diag.: Black wins ko

[Diagram]
Diag.: Black wins ko: territory

Each player has 29 points, for jigo.



Next, suppose that White wins the ko.

[Diagram]
Diag.: White wins ko

[Diagram]
Diag.: White wins ko: territory

Black has 28 points, White has 31. Result: -3.
The marked stone in the above diagrams is territory either way.



Ah. It becomes territory either way. Thanks, Bill.
- TakeNGive 11k



This is a copy of the living page "Sunjang Baduk Counting" at Sensei's Library.
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