Ten Thousand Year Ko

    Keywords: Ko, Rules

Chinese: 万年劫 (wan4 nian2 jie2)
Japanese: 万年コウ (mannen-kō)
Korean: 만년패(mannyon pae)

A ten thousand year ko is a kind of ko position where either player can initiate the fight but the player who does is at a disadvantage, since the other player will be the one to take the ko first. One player (or sometimes both) also has the option to make the position into seki, the likely outcome if neither side has the stomach for the ko.

Since neither player may be eager to fight the ko, it can remain on the board for a very long time (ten thousand years). In fact, the game can end with the position remaining unplayed, in which case it is considered a seki. (See Life and Death example 12 of the Japanese Rules.)

Example

[Diagram]

Ten Thousand Year Ko

White cannot fill the ko because she dies. Often this will become seki when Black takes white+circle and fills the ko at the end of play.

Usually this ten thousand year ko results from the long L group.

[Diagram]

White converts ko

If W1 converts the ko to a direct ko, B2 takes the ko first.

[Diagram]

Black converts ko

In this position, if B1 converts the ko, W2 takes first.

Despite its name, it is not uncommon for the ko to be fought before the end of the game and not become seki. In particular, the ko typically favors the player with fewer stones in it, because that player has less to lose by comparison with seki. See /Fighting the ko.

A ten thousand year ko is hyperactive, which means that its evaluation depends upon the ko threat situation.

For similar positions that can become seki or direct ko, but the opponent of whoever creates the ko gets to take it first, see throw-in ko and Sending Three Returning One.

A ten thousand year ko was at the center of a /rules crisis in Japan before they had written rules.

Terminology

Ten thousand year ko is a direct translation of the Japanese mannen-ko. Mannen here means "perpetual" or "prolonged" (referring, in this case, to the period until one side makes the situation into a direct ko). The Japanese term is recognized and used in the West. The less-preferred English alternative thousand year ko is also in use. See /Terminology for details.


Authors:

Bildstein, Bill, Dieter, Munisai, Tderz.

WME (October, 2005) by Bildstein, Bill, Bob McGuigan, Bob Myers, Charles, unkx80, Velobici.


This is a copy of the living page "Ten Thousand Year Ko" at Sensei's Library.
(OC) 2009 the Authors, published under the OpenContent License V1.0.
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