Enjoyed the podcast. A part of it made me wonder the following. You mentioned that you had notes that you went back to after three months, how do you store those? Would love hearing an episode on note taking.
That game (Shin Jinseo vs Lee Changho)... going from 3hr/pl and 3x ko to a New Game in flash mode... the mental whiplash must have been strong. Take care
You recommend rote learning/memorising Joseki. Is that wise? To learn sequences without the reasons behind them? As Kageyama wrote: "Play moves you understand for a change. For one thing, it will make the game more interesting."
love your veideos but i will say i only played long slow games as a ddk and advanced very quickly... i think the time control is very personal and different people will have different ways of improving. also i dont do tsumego either i am 3d on fox at the moment... ive mostly improved with understanding the game, and fundamental ways of thinking, of how should i approach different positions. if i were to boil things down the single advice i would give is play away from stregnth!! you want to play in a way that makes you as strong as possible as fast as possible while not helping your opponent becoming stronger and referably keeping them weak.
Main reason to not surrender as DDK and SDK is because your oponent can blunder a large group or play poorly strategically and lose already won game. I won a lot of games because of that. This rule apply either to chess and go.
Thanks a lot. Very helpful.
Enjoyed the podcast. A part of it made me wonder the following. You mentioned that you had notes that you went back to after three months, how do you store those? Would love hearing an episode on note taking.
That game (Shin Jinseo vs Lee Changho)... going from 3hr/pl and 3x ko to a New Game in flash mode... the mental whiplash must have been strong.
Take care
Thanks for the podcast, love to listen when going to work :)
Have you considered adding chapters to your videos? At least such like that one. It could bolster their popularity when they're long.
I will get to SDK when I am older.
You recommend rote learning/memorising Joseki. Is that wise? To learn sequences without the reasons behind them? As Kageyama wrote: "Play moves you understand for a change. For one thing, it will make the game more interesting."
love your veideos but i will say i only played long slow games as a ddk and advanced very quickly... i think the time control is very personal and different people will have different ways of improving. also i dont do tsumego either i am 3d on fox at the moment... ive mostly improved with understanding the game, and fundamental ways of thinking, of how should i approach different positions. if i were to boil things down the single advice i would give is play away from stregnth!! you want to play in a way that makes you as strong as possible as fast as possible while not helping your opponent becoming stronger and referably keeping them weak.
I think the steps to get to Dan level are pretty much the same, just a bit more intense :)
Main reason to not surrender as DDK and SDK is because your oponent can blunder a large group or play poorly strategically and lose already won game. I won a lot of games because of that. This rule apply either to chess and go.
Hey can you please spell the name of the youtuber you recommend at 13:10?
is it Go Pro Yeonwoo ?
@@S0kushi nope the other one!
@@pierpiero Do Eunkyo? Channel name is Go Inside
youtube.com/@eunkyodo?si=HVC_ROsswHQR41gb
I think this is the channel he talks about.
youtube.com/@eunkyodo?si=HVC_ROsswHQR41gb