For those who are wondering about Lian Xiao -- that's not some average player. Xiao is the #3 player in China and #5 rated in the world right now. and Ke Jie won with solid play. That's inspiring to me -- playing a top player in the world , and not going for AI stuff as is the current trend. Ke Jie may become an all time great like Lee Sedol and L. Changho were in their day. He is a true master of Go if ever one existed.
Impressive game. I remember watching Kim Myungwan analyzing Lee Sedol v Ke Jie, and some of the moves surprised Kim. He would say, “OK let me count”. Then he would say, “OK, Ke Jie reading is really strong. He knows this is good enough”. Ke Jie knows how to analyze the whole board, which is why he can just tenuki and let his opponent live locally.
I love this, every attack he made reminded me of tewari as Ke Jie forced his opponent into a really inefficient shape. In a way, this makes me think that his whole adventure into bleep-bloop land was just to acquire new ways of making his opponent efficient and he might be confident enough in it to go back to his roots.
@@dwyrin My bad, I meant M19. But after re-watching I realized it could end in ko if white haned at M19 and black cut at M18. Thanks again! I'm a fan of the basics series, it has helped me a ton.
Nice review, thanks. About names - it looks like pinyin - chinese stile of reading and writing in understanduble manner. You can write any hieroglyph using this stuf. Ke Jie I think should sound like [kə dzie]
For those who are wondering about Lian Xiao -- that's not some average player.
Xiao is the #3 player in China and #5 rated in the world right now. and Ke Jie won with solid play.
That's inspiring to me -- playing a top player in the world , and not going for AI stuff as is the current trend. Ke Jie may become an all time great like Lee Sedol and L. Changho were in their day. He is a true master of Go if ever one existed.
Ke Jie played for influence, but still got all 4 corners.
Yeah, his opponent was just too busy dealing with everything going on on the board to secure his own points. Pretty crazy~
Impressive game. I remember watching Kim Myungwan analyzing Lee Sedol v Ke Jie, and some of the moves surprised Kim. He would say, “OK let me count”. Then he would say, “OK, Ke Jie reading is really strong. He knows this is good enough”. Ke Jie knows how to analyze the whole board, which is why he can just tenuki and let his opponent live locally.
“ Here’s a lesson, you can no longer listen to your wireless earbuds when they no longer have a charge”
🤣🤣🤣I laughed pretty hard
I love this, every attack he made reminded me of tewari as Ke Jie forced his opponent into a really inefficient shape.
In a way, this makes me think that his whole adventure into bleep-bloop land was just to acquire new ways of making his opponent efficient and he might be confident enough in it to go back to his roots.
+
cool game and nice guided tour through it
24:30 yep.
Ah yes, good old Cagey.
Thanks for the video! Your content is spectacular. One question I have: why didn't he hane at 7:40 on M10?
Unless im missing something, 7:40 didnt have moves around m10 so im not sure what you mean
@@dwyrin My bad, I meant M19. But after re-watching I realized it could end in ko if white haned at M19 and black cut at M18. Thanks again! I'm a fan of the basics series, it has helped me a ton.
19:12 Headphones on earphones????
not anymore!
TLDR When you can push from behind and give 5th line territory to hane at the head of 5 stones... basics, people! :D
Awesome game. Thanks for sharing
I have no idea what the corner Life/Death save thing was. You're friendly DDK says, wow, I actually understand some of this.
Thanks for the review.
Yeah i didnnt know the corner either so dont feel bad!
thank you!
Me: Oh boy a pro review!
Batts: I hate bots!!
Me: oh...
Nice review, thanks. About names - it looks like pinyin - chinese stile of reading and writing in understanduble manner. You can write any hieroglyph using this stuf. Ke Jie I think should sound like [kə dzie]
"I think we are trying to get back together again" :DDDDDDD
Isn't Ke Jie like 20... is that really a kid?
Yes.
@@PhenomUprising Fair enough...
And his opponent is only 25, Go is a young man's game
@@purpleplusgold then why is Dwyrin still playing? O.o
@@Kuroshiro_123 That's why he hasn't picked up on bot style yet. you become more conservative as you age /s
why you don't like ke jie?
is it because he plays AI-like moves?
Downvoter must be Lian Xiao