Vital point method simplifying the outside

  Difficulty: Intermediate   Keywords: Life & Death
[Diagram]

Vital point

If you are confused by or find it difficult to see where the vital point in a shape is, try to look at the internal space left over after the opponent has reduced the internal space from the outside. In this case, after Black's reduction (from the outside) and White's answer, the internal eyespace will be the circled points - which is recognisable as the bulky five - and the vital point is the same as for a bulky five.

(Anyway, it often helps me, maybe others have better/easier ways of seeing this --MortenPahle)

How do you get to this shape? When I look, I find it more logical to imagine black a and white b than the other way around (black b is clearly got, black a not), which gives another bulky five with its vital point at 1-2 rather than 2-2. - Andre Engels


Bill: I think that Andre forgot to add the b to the diagram. I have added a b, based on his comment, but I could be wrong.

There is more, however.

[Diagram]

Vital point?

B1 reduces White's formation to the bulky five and then plays on its key point. Since it threatens to connect, White responds with W4, threatening W5, which B5 prevents.

[Diagram]

White lives

But now W6 lives.

However,

[Diagram]

Vital point

Black may approach from this side and then strike at the vital point with B3. W4 threatens to live with W5, which B5 prevents. Then White captures Black's two stones with W6.

[Diagram]

White dies

But now B1 prevents a second eye, and White dies.

(Not that White can live by playing first. ;-) See the L group pages.)


- Actually white can live starting with the 2-2 point in this particular position

[Diagram]

White lives

After W3 White has eyes at a and B2, thanks to WC.


[Diagram]

comparison: white lives by playing a not b

xela: Although I think the general principle stated at the top of this page can be useful, I find this particular example confusing. To me, the important feature of the first diagram is the white hane at the top. If that stone is removed and there is a hane at the right instead (WC in this diagram), then the vital point is at a.


What about this as another illustration?

[Diagram]

Black to play and kill

If black were to reduce by playing a, then after white b the eyespace is three in a row, so c is the vital point--but black a allows white to live. Black can kill by playing on the vital point immediately.

[Diagram]

How to find the vital point (but white lives: W4 at BC)

[Diagram]

Play on the vital point first: white dies.


This is a copy of the living page "Vital point method simplifying the outside" at Sensei's Library.
(OC) 2007 the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0.
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