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What is a Good Game
I've been accused of taking Go too seriously, and I'm willing to accept that charge. However, I realized one night, after resigning two very painful games, that I don't get upset just because I lose. I get upset when I play badly. All of this got me to thinking: What are the elements that make up a good game? For me to consider a game good, all of these elements must exist: 1. I have fun. I am able to clear my mind enough to focus on what's happening on the board, and I enjoy the feel of the stones (or the mouse). 2. I don't lose any big groups during the chuban. If I slip up and accidentally miss a connection or fail to drop in that last stone for the two eyes during yose (endgame), it can still be a good game. But if I have numerous opportunities to keep something alive and I don't seize any of them, I get frustrated. 3. I can balance whole-board and small-scale fighting. All of us go through this, of course. A game where night and day come together is a game with which I'm satisfied. 4. My opponent and I fight. I don't care much for games without fighting -- it's dull and dreary. Give me a good ko fight over large, dry moyo-making any day. Notice that it doesn't really matter to me if I win or lose (and the closer the score, the less it matters). I'm always only focused on how well I play, and as unrealistic as the phrase may be, I feel as though it really isn't whether you win or lose.. Anyone else? -- Scartol Hey, moyos are classic wetwork as far as I'm concerned. Invasion or glory, death or sabaki, take down a wall or two with me if I'm going to die ... My games are better than they used to be - doesn't correlate with winning, though. Charles Matthews
Alex Weldon: Dieter more or less hit the nail on the head. I don't care if I win or lose. I don't care all that much whether the game was close or a landslide (although close games are more fun). I just care that the game was won by the better player, because he or she is, in fact better. Games with a series of massive mistakes on both sides that come down to whose blunders summed up to be larger are just depressing, regardless of who won, or how close the game was. Unfortunately, at my level (20k* IGS) or so, those games seem to outnumber the good ones. lezogzog I'm glad when i'm able to play the strategy i chose from the beginning to the end, without being forced into another one by the opponent. When i do that, i find it a good game, whatever the result (i mean it) :o) Andrew Walkingshaw: For me, a good game is one which has had real effort put into it, and where the two players are really testing ideas against each other. Winning through having slightly better technique is a whole lot better than being pushed slowly off the board in such a manner (the worst way to lose, I feel) - but it's much less intellectually rewarding, for me, than games where the two players have plans which are fundamentally opposed. I guess I'm interested in games, at least in part, for their potential for playing in a varying range of styles, and therefore their ability to reveal things about the way people think - their personalities, in a very limited sense. It's an interesting question whether (for example) a preference for thickness over territory, or vice versa, reveals some deep-seated psychological preference. I have my doubts, but it's an amusing idea :) This is a copy of the living page "What is a Good Game" at Sensei's Library. (C) the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0. |