When a Go player tries Chess

image

I guess I just haven’t put in enough time… (lol) ^w^

5 Likes

True. I’m certainly a humble bugcat.

But I’m also currently your only data point~

3 Likes

I’m currently around 2000 on chess.com, and 2100 on lichess. However, this isn’t really a reliable gauge of how well go players play chess, since I’ve played both since childhood.

4 Likes

It took this 3d about 3 years to go from 1000 to 1500 lichess blitz :wink:


(lichess blitz rating over past 3 years)

image
(total number of games, I mostly play 3+2 blitz)

I certainly believe I could reach 2000 lichess with dedicated study (no idea what timeframe would be realistic), but the above shows how my progress looks like “without trying” (only playing fast games, not spending much time practicing tactics, not doing any serious reviews of my games). So unless I decide to take chess more seriously in the future, I might never reach 2000.

9 Likes

I’d make a wikipost table where we compare our chess and Go ranks, but I forget whether you have to be a regular to do that.

Edit: Yep, seems so.

This is now a wiki have fun

2 Likes

I think there is a difference between a Go player playing Chess for fun and a Go player playing Chess with the intent to improve. (Watching videos, reviewing games, problems, ect…)

3 Likes

I fall for the stalemate every time. This very concept is just too bizarre for a go player to think of.

3 Likes

Are you still in contact with Jonathan Schrantz? Because when you teached him Go he was asking about agressive play in Go.
Would my games be by defintion in Go?
Are you planning to do something with him or other chess players again?
I would volunter to be the trainign partner

Q e6 ++
but yea - who wants to win if you can trade tower vs checkmate

When a go player tries to play chess, you would expect that player to place the pieces on the coordinates (and not inside the boxes).

I would love to see how far I could get in chess or shogi by only playing games and doing tactics, but I just can’t bear the thought of putting in all that effort only to regret I hadn’t spent it playing Go instead.

3 Likes

You would progress slowly and you wouldn‘t get very far. It‘s like with any other sport: Guidance and input from strong players do make a huge difference.

1 Like

I couldn‘t disagree more.
2000 takes A LOT of work. (And the later you start with it, the harder it gets.) Go-skills do help you very very little in chess. And vice versa.

3 Likes

Yeah 2000 you aren’t far from being able to teach it. Would be the equivalent of reaching 1d+? Presumably there is a way i could work that out if it weren’t 6am.

So the question is how much transferable skills does Go give you? And the answer to that is probably almost none, and mainly psychological (eg time management, self management under pressure). All the rest is mainly learnt pattern recognition which is totally non transferable and a bit of ‘lets look at some variations and see how to fit a wider aim’…

Agree. What you can say however: If someone is good at Go, there is a good chance he/she is talented and interested in picking up such games in general. Which is a good starting point of course.

2 Likes

1d = 2000 is a pretty common figure.

This discussion has come up a few times before. I even made a thread with a survey.

The approximate increment over 2000 that can be translated into an extra dan is probably somewhere between 60 and 75.

Conversion in steps of 75:

2000: 1d
2075: 2d
2150: 3d
2225: 4d
2300: 5d
2375: 6d
2450: 7d
2525: 8d
2600: Pro

and in steps of 60:

2000: 1d
2060: 2d
2120: 3d
2180: 4d
2240: 5d
2300: 6d
2360: 7d
2420: 8d
2480: Pro

1 Like

This frankly doesn’t work, sorry to chime in like that. kyu/dan-ratings follow a fundamentally different skill hierarchy than elo. A two-stone difference in go relates to the required handicap for an even game, whereas a 200-point elo difference relates directly to a winrate, which is invariant to the absolute rank. You can see here that this does not hold up for a handicap-based rating system. The correlation of the two systems is just not linear.
In other words, a 1000 player has the same odds to beat a 1200, as a 2500 has to beat a 2700. In go, on the other hand, it is overwhelmingly likely that a 6d will beat a 4d, whereas 10k vs 12k has comparatively even win probabilities.
Therefore, if you translate elo into go ranks, the jumps have to increase with the ranks. If 2d is 60 points stronger than 1d, then 6d should be, idk, 100 points stronger than 5d, the exact number can probably be figured out by analyzing playing data.

4 Likes

How do you mean:

It’s literally almost three times as likely. That’s quite the staggering difference imho.

5 Likes

Note that ratings numbers are dependable on their player base
i was around 4k in my play group. After Years of absence i am 10k around here and i still believe i did not forget mutch.

Same in chess, My blitz rating in chess.com is 1600 while 1950 in lichess

3 Likes

None is exaggerated in my opinion.
I dunno from go to chess besides that a strong chess player who i teached go told me there is use of intuition in the middle game of chess.

From chess to go, you have to stay focused on the whole image, to read sequences and try to find the best move, to deny your opponent plans at least.

They are different games, sure, but have some similarities in the way you handle them and these are very welcome abilities when i teach go to chess players.

4 Likes