Bad Habits

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It seems like there are a lot of bad habits shared by many Go players. This page is here to discuss some of these habits, why people do them, and why they bother other people.

See also Good Habits and Go Etiquette.

Table of contents


While, before or after playing

Bad Internet habits

Tournament Bad Habits

  • Playing the game in Byoyomi
  • Entering at a fictitious grade
  • Ludicrous Yose Hamete

Losing habits

Lose them and you will get stronger.

Other bad habits


...And since by now, we have elaborately documented the bad habits, how about switching to the Good Habits in playing go?

--Stefan


Also see Gorobei's comments in Sow Discord In The Enemy's Camp - now that's what I call mean strategies :o) --Arno


I was wondering wether playing go at work is a good habit or a bad one :o) --Lezogzog


[1] Jan de Wit writes: Are this one and SocksAside for real? I've heard Go players can become quite weird, but this... It would be fun to distract your opponent like this in a non-serious game :-)

Alex Weldon: There was a guy at the kiwon I used to go to in Korea who sang while he played. I've seen others do it too. I played a guy in a tournament who started singing during our game. I think it was because I had commented before we started playing that it was an important game for both of us, since the winner would place in the top 3 for sure. He claimed he didn't care about placing, and was just in the tournament for fun. I guess he was trying to show me how nonchalant he was about the game. Fortunately, someone at the next table asked him to shut the hell up before I had to.


I was playing a game at a local go club last week. During our game, my opponent put a go stone in his mouth and kept sucking it all the time during our game.
I was really glad that he forgot to put it on the goban later....Yuck! -- MarkD


Neil - When playing on the internet, I wonder, should we be more tolerant of youth who carry some of these habits? I'm torn. I hesitate to blame kids for being kids, but at the same time I play the game to play, not to teach other people's kids good manners.


Alex Weldon: Since there's a page about joseki as a source of bad habits, I'd like to raise an issue about the possibility of tsumego as a source of bad habits.


axd: It seems normal to me that fingers should be clean while playing; is it acceptable to draw players' attention to the fact that hands should be clean before and during play, or does this rather smell like excessive obsession? (In case you wonder, personally I hate dirty hands manipulating "clean" tools such as pencils, for example - but I have no problem with a technician's hands which cannot avoid being dirty.) I always insist that anyone wishing to play with my goban have hands cleaned before (I explicitly state it when I lend it to anyone), and I will not tolerate any activity such as eating/drinking that would make hands - at least the playing hand - dirty. A particular situation is at a club, where the material is not personal, so people could be somewhat less disciplined: is it acceptable there to impose such a rule, or is this too pushing?

Malweth: Although certainly a bad habit, unless the person is excessively dirty (a lot of grease on their hands, etc) it's probably a bit breach to call them out for it. Of course, if it's your own goban I fully support making them wash their hands first (even if visibly clean ;). Of course, I personally wouldn't care with any of the boards & stones that I currently have! Just wait until I get a traditional floor board and slate & shell stones... I'll be getting (or making) one of those plexiglass covers and putting a lock on it ;) (What more can you expect for someone with a dog and a kid on the way...)


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This is a copy of the living page "Bad Habits" at Sensei's Library.
(OC) 2005 the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0.
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