The Game of GoBookRix, 2014 M06 2 - 179 páginas The Game of Go by Arthur Smith (1870-1929), first published in 1908. This book is intended as a practical guide to the game of Go. It is especially designed to assist students of the game who have acquired a smattering of it in some way and who wish to investigate it further at their leisure. Go (Chinese: weiqi, Japanese: igo, Korean: baduk, Vietnamese: cờ vây, common meaning: "encircling game") is a board game for two players that originated in China more than 2,500 years ago. The game is noted for being rich in strategy despite its relatively simple rules. According to chess master Emanuel Lasker: "The rules of Go are so elegant, organic, and rigorously logical that if intelligent life forms exist elsewhere in the universe, they almost certainly play Go." |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 23
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... stones were carried with them to the field of battle, and as soon as the battle was over, they were brought out, and ... three of the great Japanese generals, Nobunaga, Hideyoshi, and Iyeyasu, were devotees of the game. It is related ...
... stones were carried with them to the field of battle, and as soon as the battle was over, they were brought out, and ... three of the great Japanese generals, Nobunaga, Hideyoshi, and Iyeyasu, were devotees of the game. It is related ...
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... stones on the board as a handicap to make the adversaries approximately equal. According to the rules of the Academy ... three stones, and a player of the ninth degree would allow a player of the first degree four stones. Four was the ...
... stones on the board as a handicap to make the adversaries approximately equal. According to the rules of the Academy ... three stones, and a player of the ninth degree would allow a player of the first degree four stones. Four was the ...
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... three of the necessary stones advantageously placed, but the Russians escaped before the fourth could be moved into position. At the final battle of Mukden the enveloping strategy characteristic of the game was carried out with still ...
... three of the necessary stones advantageously placed, but the Russians escaped before the fourth could be moved into position. At the final battle of Mukden the enveloping strategy characteristic of the game was carried out with still ...
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... three hundred and sixty-one points of intersection, including the corners and the points along the edge of the field. The stones are placed on these points of intersection, and not in the spaces as the pieces are in Chess or Checkers ...
... three hundred and sixty-one points of intersection, including the corners and the points along the edge of the field. The stones are placed on these points of intersection, and not in the spaces as the pieces are in Chess or Checkers ...
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... stones was first introduced in the Ashikaga period. In form the stones are disk-shaped, but not always exactly round, and are convex on both surfaces, so that they tremble slightly when placed on the board. They are about three-quarters ...
... stones was first introduced in the Ashikaga period. In form the stones are disk-shaped, but not always exactly round, and are convex on both surfaces, so that they tremble slightly when placed on the board. They are about three-quarters ...
Contenido
Sección 13 | 8 |
Sección 14 | 20 |
Sección 15 | 13 |
Sección 16 | 18 |
Sección 17 | 32 |
Sección 18 | 40 |
Sección 19 | 42 |
Sección 20 | 42 |
Sección 9 | xi |
Sección 10 | xi |
Sección 11 | xi |
Sección 12 | xvi |
Sección 21 | 44 |
Sección 22 | 10 |
Sección 23 | 16 |
Sección 24 | 17 |
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Términos y frases comunes
actual play advantage adversary adversary’s stones beginner better game Black plays black stones Black would play Black’s territory capture Chess Chess openings commencing completely surrounded Dame dead stones defends Diagram edge end game end positions following stones four stones gained game of Go Go players group of stones Handicap Black White Handicap Plate 24 handicap stone Handicap White Black Honinbo Dosaku Honinbo Shuye Inseki Japan Joseki Jowa Kageme kakari kill Kogeima Komoku Korschelt means methods of play Murase Shuho necessary opening Osaeru placed Plate 13 Plate 37 Plate 42 play at Q prevents White reply retains the Sente right-hand corner rule of Ko Seki Semeai Shogun shown in Plate side situation skill stone is played stones on line Takamoku Takes Tenuki three stones Tsugu vacant intersections vacant space Watari weaker player White attacks white group White plays white stones White threatens Yasui Sanchi