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2006-12-14 16:41:41 · 4 answers · asked by Freddie ? 1 in Games & Recreation Board Games

4 answers

Its easy to play but hard hard hard to master. Just pick a color - black,white - and each player takes a turn and on each turn puts one piece on the board, on the lines. The object of the game is to surround your opponents pieces with yours... one at a time.

Piece of advice - if you start first by laying the first piece on the board - don't start in a corner or in the very center, later you'll understand.

2006-12-14 16:50:59 · answer #1 · answered by soul_plus_heart_equals_man 4 · 0 0

Go is a classic game that falls under the heading "A minute to learn, a lifetime to master".

1. Players place a single go stone of their color on the board each turn. Stones are played at the intersection of the board lines.

2. Whenever a stone or a group of stones of a color is completely surrounded, meaning that every intersection that touches that group is occupied by a stone of another color, the player of the surrounding color removes the surrounded stones and adds them to the captured stones. If the stone that is placed would immediately be captured but also encloses and captures a stone or group of stones of the opposing color, then the stones of the opposite color are captured (e.g. one space left within a group of stones, the hole is surrounded by black stones, but there is a connecting line of white stones, and the group of black stones is otherwise surrounded by white. If white plays a stone in that space, the black stones are captured, instead of the white stone being captured immediately on play.)

3. A player cannot play a stone to recreate the board situation from one turn prior (e.g. In an area of mixed black and white stones, Black plays a stone that captures a White stone. White cannot then place a stone in the space that was just captured to capture a black stone).

4. The game ends when both players pass, usually when a determination is made that no further plays will benefit either player. Scoring counts the areas enclosed by each player, less the stones that were captured by the opponent.

Other than that, there is further understanding about the strategy and mechanisms of Go, but those are the essential rules.

2006-12-15 11:45:09 · answer #2 · answered by Skelebone 4 · 0 0

My husband plays go and has tried to teach me several times but I really don't get it. I have played Othello and Reversi but it is not that similar. Try this site it might help. http://www.well.com/user/mmcadams/gointro.html

2006-12-15 03:14:24 · answer #3 · answered by Tetsi 3 · 0 0

it's like reversi or othello

2006-12-14 17:02:25 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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