Vincent,<br>
<br>
I found your reply very agreable except this:<br>
<br>
"The first few moves in go decide the outcome of the game already, as
the rest is just a 'playout' of the first few moves. So what matters most is the first few moves in the game."<br>
<br>
Many professional games are decided in the endgame. When I lose at
chess, it's almost always resignation within 50 moves; when I lose at
go, it's frequently necessary to count, less frequently resignation
(but handicaps make more games close), and I think I never resign
before move 150 or so. In fact, some crazy mathematicians proved that
the endgame in go is very tricky, see
<a href="http://senseis.xmp.net/?TemperatureCGT">http://senseis.xmp.net/?TemperatureCGT</a> (using "temperature" from
combinatorial game theory).<br>
<br>
As it happens I'm really bad at fuseki, and often have to catch up with
fighting in the middle game, which often leads to resentful squeezing
of the yose :-) So I rarely have quick games.<br>
<br>
Peter<br><br><br>