Free Resources for Beginners

We have had a number of beginners join recently, and the amount of information can be overwhelming. This is an annotated list of links that I, as a fellow beginner, have found useful. Many of these free sites have been mentioned elsewhere on the OGS forums, and that’s how I discovered them.


The Interactive Way to Go
http://playgo.to/iwtg/en/
This is a classic site, often recommended, and it is where I started — but only because it was the first tutorial I found. About two-thirds of the way through, it became harder, especially since I knew nothing else about Go. At that point, I set it aside and went back later to finish it.
Pros: Provides a good overview. Covers additional topics that some other tutorials miss.
Cons: Does not work on iPad.


Igowin Tutor app


If you have an iPhone or iPad, this free app’s Tutor section is excellent for complete beginners. Had I known about it, I would have started here, although it was still a very good review of the basics. For other platforms, this is the free eBook it is based on, The Way to Go by Karl Baker: http://www.usgo.org/files/pdf/W2Go4E-book.pdf
Pros: Starts with a logical progression: Points, Liberties, Connections, and then Capture. That order made a lot of sense to me.
Cons: Not yet available on Android.


OGS Tutorial


This is the interactive Learn to Play Go tutorial on the main OGS site. It has a clean, well-designed interface and is simple to use. It is worth checking out, even if you have already read another introduction to the game.
Pros: This is one of the quickest ways for a total beginner to learn enough to start playing games.
Cons: Additional topics are beyond the scope of this short tutorial. It ends with an option to play a computer bot (Fuego), which can time out.


Sensei’s Library
http://senseis.xmp.net/?PagesForBeginners
Sensei’s library is a wiki of over 22,000 pages dedicated to the game of Go. The beginners’ section is a good starting point. Recommended by @Pempu. There is also a glossary of Go Terms that link to full explanations, often with illustrated examples: http://senseis.xmp.net/?GoTerms
Pros: Here you can find details on a huge variety of topics related to Go.
Cons: The sheer volume of information can be daunting. Some pages are works in progress.


GoChild


This site was originally created for a kindergartener, and there are no written instructions. You solve tsumego (puzzles) by choosing a Pack in the right column. After you load a Question, the left column displays an icon. For example, in the capture sections the icon is a hand placing a stone in a bowl. (It really is a stone, not a tennis ball, which was my first thought. :wink: ) After the introductory sections, one of the best packs for beginners is Life and Death Basic. The icon for that section shows two eyes, and there are hundreds of examples that teach you to recognize the difference between real eyes and false eyes.
Pros: Fun to use. Problems are organized by category and are presented in order, from easy to more advanced.
Cons: No written instructions. Although there are hundreds of free problems, access to the full site is by paid subscription.


Falling in Love with Baduk: Play a Game in One Week
http://agfgo.org/downloads/LoveBaduk.pdf
This free 240-page eBook has simple chapters to explain each new concept, followed by short tests to check your understanding. The value is in actually doing the problems before reading the answers. Since I didn’t want to print the tests, I would take a screenshot of each test page and import it into a whiteboard app to mark it up. (I used Whiteboard Lite for iPad.) The errata file is here: http://senseis.xmp.net/?FallingInLoveWithBaduk
Pros: This course is well thought out. New chapters build on previous ones. It uses an effective learning method.
Cons: This eBook is not interactive. The text, translated from Korean, repeatedly uses the term “dansoo” rather than the more familiar term “atari.”


Go Game Guru: Learn Go the Easy Way




These lessons are clear and well written. Sometimes it helps to have the same concepts explained in a different way, and these pages are particularly easy to understand. The third lesson covers double atari, nets, and ladders.
Pros: Nice writing style, enjoyable to read.
Cons: There might be more lessons available on this site, but I am guessing you need to sign up for weekly emails to find them.


321Go
http://321go.org/home/
This free Dutch site offers an entire curriculum to study. Click on the tiny UK flag for the English translation. The first steps are easy going. I have bogged down in the middle, but I hope to eventually complete it.
Pros: This site is more ambitious than most other tutorials, and it includes more advanced study. But if you stick with it, it will track your improvement over time.
Cons: Graphics are small and low resolution. Even on the English pages, some alerts show up in Dutch. (The error “Je kunt meer stenen vangen” translates to “You can get more stones.”) There are no answers, which can be frustrating when you can’t solve a specific problem.


OGS Puzzles
@mark5000 's Exercises for Beginners https://online-go.com/puzzle/2625
@Françisa 's Library https://online-go.com/puzzle/5
The advantage of both collections is that the authors have taken the time to explain the right and wrong answers. These puzzle sets are a bit challenging for anyone just starting out, but the explanations are valuable. If you get stuck and can’t solve a specific puzzle to get the Next button, click on the puzzle name in the upper right for a drop-down list.
Pros: These two puzzle sets have great text, explaining why a specific move either works or doesn’t.
Cons: For the OGS Puzzles section in general, a “Hint” button would be nice, for the times when I have no clue how to solve a problem.


Learn Go
http://www.learngo.co.uk/GoTutor/Tutor.php
When you are ready to make the leap from smaller boards and move up to 19x19, this tutor is a smart next step. Most beginner sites focus on 9x9 or small sections of a larger board. Learn Go shows you how to approach 19x19, teaching you to look at the full board. On page 2, when the tutorial started talking about the board in terms of land surrounded by water, I wasn’t holding out much hope for the rest of the course. I was wrong. There is a lot of useful information here.
Pros: Learn Go includes elementary strategy and tactics for 19x19 games that many other beginner sites don’t mention.
Cons: It is missing an introduction that explains what level student would benefit most, as well as a quick summary of the content so that you know what to expect.


Those are my top picks, but the list is not complete. Do you know of other sites that would help beginners? Please add them.

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Awesome, @way2go, thank you!

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Thanks for these.

I regularly send new players to The Interactive Way to Go. I found it a good foundation for just starting out.

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Erm moderators. PIN THIS THREAD and keep it pinned FOREVER.

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and this:

(for the Spanish world)

(I can delete my comments after you have taken notice, if you notify me :wink: )

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And there’s a HUGE link collection here:

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This list if very helpful. Unfortunately, I have just started to learn Go and Adobe has disable Flash. Everyone recommends The Interactive Way To Go but it requires Flash. Is there a work around?

That’s a very old website, I think there are newer website has the same function to teach Go interactively like

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There is a newer version of Way To Go. wtg.usgo.org
Also, I leaned a lot from Falling in Love with Baduk.

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Improve Fast in Go, Milton Bradley

To quote the description from its article, which is confusingly titled Improve Fast at Go:

This book is not a Go primer nor even a second book, so it presumes that the reader intending to profit from it already has a firm grasp (if perhaps not yet complete mastery) of the basic rules of Go, as well as the fundamentals of life and death, Joseki, and Fuseki. Its objective is to provide players from double digit to perhaps 5 Kyu with crucial insights into the key issues of deciding what, where, and why to play next!

Table of Contents

Introduction
Chapter 1 - The Role Of Fighting In Go
Chapter 2 - Important Stones
Chapter 3 - Strong/Weak Stones
Chapter 4 - Peeps And Cuts
Chapter 5 - Sector Lines, Enclosure & Connectivity
Chapter 6 - S.W.O.T. Analysis
Chapter 7 - A Sampling Of Major Fighting Scenarios
Epilogue
Glossary Of Japanese Go Terms

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Hmm, I poked around his homepage and his writing is a bit… rustic.

Tell me if the book’s not of good standard and I’ll take it down.

PS. this made me chuckle:

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BGA beginner puzzle sheets

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There are a lot of free materials for beginners on the Go Magic platform:
How to Play Go — A Modern Tutorial to Learn Go Rules — A New Interactive Page
https://gomagic.org/courses/go-rules/ — Interactive Video Course on Go Rules
https://gomagic.org/courses/the-fundamentals-of-go-on-13x13/ — Interactive Video Course on Go Basics

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Well, I guess someone didn’t listen to this. Bugcat’s list is much more #important and accessible to beginners [/sarcasm]

Well, since we are here and I have never seen this topic, I’ll post it here as well in case it is helpful to people looking for such a thread:

I liked the list of chapters idea that I saw in one of bugcat’s replies above, so here it is:
Chapter 1 - Introduction and basic rules
Chapter 2 - Good Shapes
Chapter 3 - Let’s play
Chapter 4 - Joseki and Fuseki
Chapter 5 - Attacking and defending
Chapter 6 - Life and Death
Chapter 7 - Some advanced topics (Learn to let go, Light and Heavy stones, Creating many groups etc)

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