Notes for later: - 0:38 : Mini chinese (flexible fuseki) - 12:21 : Micro chinese - 13:40 : What if the opponent breaks my nascent mini chinese fuseki ? - 14:36 : Then I play the Lay (?) Joseki !
0:18 Leela likes making a small-knight's corner enclosure on the lower left, or a small-knight's approach to the black 4-4 stone on the upper right for the high and low Chinese openings. Leela did not like invading on the right side and starting a fight. 2:02 Leela liked the knight's approach to the black 4-4 stone on the right side. It also liked to play just below (3rd line) the right side star point. Leela didn't like invading the lower right.
Your lectures are the best in youtube, Please choose your students at least 10 kyu or something.I am getting annoyed by their questions.I was expecting someone to say this is the best approach to mini Chinese opening but they don't even know what is fuseki.They are distracting the lessons we can learn much more from you with better students.
I for one am a beginner (been playing for only 2 weeks now), and I really appreciate those questions as they help me see why those are incorrect approaches. Go doesn't seem like a very beginner friendly game and its nice to have found a place on UA-cam where I can actually learn. If he followed your proposition then the questions asked would be too advance for complete beginners which would discourage new GO players. Honestly I found what you said quite offense since you seem to be saying that anyone that is not smart enough to innately be a 10kyu from the moment they start learning go, shouldn't even try learning. We need videos and tutorials for noobs as well. -.-
cbehen These particular lectures are him teaching at the Seattle Go center. Such classes are generally open to help grow the Go community. Just the fact that he's putting these lectures up on youtube is huge. Bottom line is that you don't get to be annoyed at a sensei's in person students when he is giving you his lectures for free.
Nick Sibicky teaches the DDK class at the Seattle Go Center - so of course there are people below 10 Kyu. I'm very happy that he keeps uploading videos from his class.
Notes for later:
- 0:38 : Mini chinese (flexible fuseki)
- 12:21 : Micro chinese
- 13:40 : What if the opponent breaks my nascent mini chinese fuseki ?
- 14:36 : Then I play the Lay (?) Joseki !
0:18 Leela likes making a small-knight's corner enclosure on the lower left, or a small-knight's approach to the black 4-4 stone on the upper right for the high and low Chinese openings. Leela did not like invading on the right side and starting a fight.
2:02 Leela liked the knight's approach to the black 4-4 stone on the right side. It also liked to play just below (3rd line) the right side star point. Leela didn't like invading the lower right.
Spoiler, there's a micro chinese too.
10:14 Such an offense!!! :-o
:-D
21:30 what about black jumping up to the center?
Yo
Your lectures are the best in youtube, Please choose your students at least 10 kyu or something.I am getting annoyed by their questions.I was expecting someone to say this is the best approach to mini Chinese opening but they don't even know what is fuseki.They are distracting the lessons we can learn much more from you with better students.
I for one am a beginner (been playing for only 2 weeks now), and I really appreciate those questions as they help me see why those are incorrect approaches. Go doesn't seem like a very beginner friendly game and its nice to have found a place on UA-cam where I can actually learn. If he followed your proposition then the questions asked would be too advance for complete beginners which would discourage new GO players. Honestly I found what you said quite offense since you seem to be saying that anyone that is not smart enough to innately be a 10kyu from the moment they start learning go, shouldn't even try learning. We need videos and tutorials for noobs as well. -.-
TheZalor ^ THIS
cbehen These particular lectures are him teaching at the Seattle Go center. Such classes are generally open to help grow the Go community. Just the fact that he's putting these lectures up on youtube is huge. Bottom line is that you don't get to be annoyed at a sensei's in person students when he is giving you his lectures for free.
cbehen You’re wrong.
Nick Sibicky teaches the DDK class at the Seattle Go Center - so of course there are people below 10 Kyu. I'm very happy that he keeps uploading videos from his class.