I am wondering what strong chessplayers around the world think of the game of Go.
The reason I wonder is because Go is widely considered much more complex and hard to master than chess. Go is mostly popular in Asian nations, where it has its history. In North America, it is not nearly as popular as chess, except among Asians I suppose.
Mathematically speaking, Go is indeed much more complex. I tend to think one must be a lifelong practitioner, since childhood, to really appreciate the subtleties behind the strategy.
I am asking about this because I have created several chess variants that are much more complex than standard chess, even though the board is still 8 x 8. Are strong chess players afraid of higher complexity? Is chess about as complex as they can stand?
I have even invented a "quantum" type of chess, in which pieces are not defined until they move like a chess piece. That is to say, they can move just like a King,but only in a forward or sideways direction, not backward, without capturing or threatening to capture, and if they do that, they are still undefined. Only the King itself and the Pawns are not one of these quantum pieces.
The quantum pieces only become an actual chess piece if and when they move like that piece, i.e. they are "observed". So eventually you have to allow observation, because otherwise you don't progress and your opponent can progress ahead of you.
(edit: this game becomes chess if you move out your pieces in regular fashion. You can only have 2 of each minor piece and 1 Queen. But since you aren't required to move the pieces out as you would in chess, you can instead move them out in King-move fashion and keep their realization potential going until the 'optimal' moment ... just when that moment IS is the key question!)
Even if this game is not more complex than Go (it might be), I think I have others that are. So I am basically asking strong chessplayers, what do you think about MORE complexity on an 8 x 8 chessboard?
I have seen very complex chess variants on huge chessboards, and it doesn't appeal to me. I love the 8x8 chessboard. It really is the perfect size, and only 10 x 10 is a reasonable alternative, but to me not quite as good as 8 x 8.
Go has much simpler movement than chess, but on a much bigger 19 x 19 board. I was reading about the world human Go champion playing against the AlphaGo (?) program some years ago, and in the first game, the program played a piece on a certain location very early in the game, and the human World Champion already realized he was playing from way behind. How that can be determined on such a large board so early in the game struck me as .... incredible.
The reason I wonder is because Go is widely considered much more complex and hard to master than chess. Go is mostly popular in Asian nations, where it has its history. In North America, it is not nearly as popular as chess, except among Asians I suppose.
Mathematically speaking, Go is indeed much more complex. I tend to think one must be a lifelong practitioner, since childhood, to really appreciate the subtleties behind the strategy.
I am asking about this because I have created several chess variants that are much more complex than standard chess, even though the board is still 8 x 8. Are strong chess players afraid of higher complexity? Is chess about as complex as they can stand?
I have even invented a "quantum" type of chess, in which pieces are not defined until they move like a chess piece. That is to say, they can move just like a King,but only in a forward or sideways direction, not backward, without capturing or threatening to capture, and if they do that, they are still undefined. Only the King itself and the Pawns are not one of these quantum pieces.
The quantum pieces only become an actual chess piece if and when they move like that piece, i.e. they are "observed". So eventually you have to allow observation, because otherwise you don't progress and your opponent can progress ahead of you.
(edit: this game becomes chess if you move out your pieces in regular fashion. You can only have 2 of each minor piece and 1 Queen. But since you aren't required to move the pieces out as you would in chess, you can instead move them out in King-move fashion and keep their realization potential going until the 'optimal' moment ... just when that moment IS is the key question!)
Even if this game is not more complex than Go (it might be), I think I have others that are. So I am basically asking strong chessplayers, what do you think about MORE complexity on an 8 x 8 chessboard?
I have seen very complex chess variants on huge chessboards, and it doesn't appeal to me. I love the 8x8 chessboard. It really is the perfect size, and only 10 x 10 is a reasonable alternative, but to me not quite as good as 8 x 8.
Go has much simpler movement than chess, but on a much bigger 19 x 19 board. I was reading about the world human Go champion playing against the AlphaGo (?) program some years ago, and in the first game, the program played a piece on a certain location very early in the game, and the human World Champion already realized he was playing from way behind. How that can be determined on such a large board so early in the game struck me as .... incredible.
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