27:50 Dude was like "He's using his brain?! NOPE."
@uw10isplaya2 жыл бұрын
One of my fav vids of yours, borderline unhinged after that first game, then the unintentional comedic timing of 27:38 "for the first time today you're using your brain" and finally one one the opponents insta-resigns lol.
@harryarmstrong57282 жыл бұрын
Losing due to sheer boredom is def the worst. I hate winning the game in 30 moves and spending the next 200 trying to pay attention enough to avoid some sort of boneheaded mistake. Ugh, such a waste of time.
@zengokigyh2 жыл бұрын
I love how you always show us how to win without much reading. It's so instructive. Thank you!
@stephdechatillon65912 жыл бұрын
It is very pleasant and interesting to watch your Go videos. Thanks for sharing.
@HunterThinker2 жыл бұрын
Good! Use your aggressive feelings. Let the hate flow through you! I can feel your anger. You're hate has made you powerful. Now fulfill your destiny!
@stevendegennaro2 жыл бұрын
Nothing makes me angrier than when this happens.
@slowercuber77672 жыл бұрын
I want to thank you for sharing (in some other vids) about how to surround and kill, because I'm so bad at fuseki, surrounding and killing sometimes saves games for me. Sorry about you losing to the chaos flinger in the prior game, this game was a good one to share. thanks.
@martinsmerek90632 жыл бұрын
I'm still wondering if continuing the game I'm losing is actually bad behaviour. Saying they don't have a chance is not correct. Obviously there is a chance. Slim, true, but it is there. If my opponent continues playing and I cannot keep my emotions (boredom, anger) in check, doesn't that mean that I'm actually not that good in the game? Another example, does it mean that I should resign right before the first move when playing somebody 5 ranks above me? (when there is negligible chance of me winning) I recognize that there is some point when it is courteous resigning, but is it really after 50 moves, when a lot can happen in the rest of the game?
@SeuPera2 жыл бұрын
Yes. I do not agree with him in this. There are people who are still at their ranks because they sucks at the end game. They may be too greed or agressives and loses the focus when winning. Some purists may disagree, but for me it's no different than using trick moves. It may be a bit insulting to be in the other end, because you are telling them: You know, I think you can still lose this with. But hey. It's their job to prove you wrong. And, let's be fair, in a lot of times they can't and you are absolutely right. Even more when in Byo Yomi. PS: This is still my favorite go channel, and I understand why all the rants... For a content maker it may be even more difficult and stressful to play games and to lose what you know you shoul've win.
@Asbayen2 жыл бұрын
It's more than fox is casual games. If they were in a tournament playing out would make sense but casual games are for fun and there is very little fun gained after 100 dead lost moves.
@martinsmerek90632 жыл бұрын
@@Asbayen I can understand that argument. On the other hand, such games are likely not just about having fun. Otherwise you would not mind just resigning and getting another game as soon as it starts being boring (yes, I know people who would resign if the opponent starts playing nonsense just to prolong the game). I think these games are also about getting good score/rating/ranking up etc. Dwyrin usually does not just say "I really had fun playing today" but rather shows us his progress and score (which is absolutely ok!). I personally try to take such "won" game as a challenge. Do I have what it takes to really win this game? Can I simplify game to win it cleanly? I think it is quite good exercise and winning game with this mindset can be quite fulfilling :)
@Maharani19912 жыл бұрын
I've heard pros saying, "Never resign a game before move 150. Unless your dragon dies, in which case, still never resign before move 100."
@petervonbergen53642 жыл бұрын
Nothing better than punishing bleeb bloopers. Lol.
@zimmicks31702 жыл бұрын
I find Go fascinating because every move a human plays, is based on a "limited" understanding of what is actually going on in the board. That limited understanding is on a scale: the higher your skill level, the more you understand the whole board. However, it would not surprise me in the least that even among the best Professional level players, they really only ever fully and completely understand no more than 70-80% of all the moves they play in a Go game. The other 20-30%, to me it seems, is where the AI beats us. It always understands more of the whole board than we do. So it fascinates me that we have the capacity to play moves that we don't understand because we saw an AI play them. And that those moves have the potential to win games, IF the other human player fails to respond properly.
@TheNoirKamui2 жыл бұрын
It is absolutely part of the game.
@xoreign2 жыл бұрын
The dab...
@longago-igo2 жыл бұрын
Fun game!
@gregj57712 жыл бұрын
You are writing a book? Sounds cool. Go related or other?
@weestro72 жыл бұрын
As a subscriber I would humbly suggest that your Patreon people might go freely along with your taking one month a year or something to exclusively play some game like Animal Crossing: something nice and friendly and Kumbaya-style. Just an idea, as I’m unsure how demanding/high maintenance other Patreoners may be. What did you have for dinner? 😁
@godkingcthulhu1382 жыл бұрын
🐙
@davidbendig9612 жыл бұрын
this game left me confused. No going ok what's big right now, no structure, only random tenukis and subsequent what's the shape ok destroyed , next...
@zaksmith10352 жыл бұрын
GoodNESS, the bots are just flooding your comments section. Must be frustrating.
@dwyrin2 жыл бұрын
Yeah. I normally hang around to check the comment section and report them but this time i loaded up a game and didnt look back >>