What we’re about
The purpose of this group is to meet in person in order to learn and play the 4,000 year-old strategy game known as Go (in Japan and the Western World), Weichi (in China and Taiwan), Baduk (in Korea). Beginners and kids are welcome! It only takes a few minutes to learn the rules!
How to play: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lP63zfY-FM0&list=PLS2DbBy4ITmAmPHr414VTfOpgl9CmIfIZ&index=1&t=11s
Fun & Free online tutorials: http://playgo.to/iwtg/en/, http://senseis.xmp.net/?WhatIsGo
Ever heard of "Hikaru no Go" or seen the movie "A Beautiful Mind"? If so, then, you may already be familiar with the game of Go.
Go is a 4,000 year-old strategy game that is the official National Game of Japan! The 5th and 15th of January are "Go no hin" (Go Days) holidays in Japan to honor the place that Go plays in their culture.
Although the game originated in China, (as did other aspects of Japanese culture, like the Kanji characters, for example), the Japanese, until recently, were the best players. Playing it is considered, by many, to be a type of "meditation". In China, even during Confucius's time, it was considered one of the four things that a nobleman needed to master: Go, poetry, music, and writing.
It is played in Japan, China and Taiwan, and Korea and there are 24-hour Go cable TV channels in each of these countries. MRI studies show that, whereas Chess just uses the left half of the brain (the sequential/analytical side), playing Go requires both halves of the brain! The right side being the global/creative/intuitive side.
In order to help their children's brain development, Japanese parents are really pushing their kids to learn and play this game (maybe we should be doing the same!?) The book "Go as Communication", written by a Japanese professional Go player, recounts how it has been introduced into K-12 schools all over the world and, according to the book, everywhere it has been introduced, academic perform has gone up and problem behavior has decreased!
Wow, just from playing a game!? I find that pretty amazing!
BTW - professional Go players can make millions of dollars and, there are a lot of female professional Go players, too. The AGF (American Go Foundation) provides FREE starter sets for K-12 Go clubs at schools, libraries, YMCA's, YWCA's, etc.
Like Western Chess, it is taught at West Point Military Academy. U.S. General Douglas MacArthur studied it in WWII, because the Japanese military played it a great deal. Also, Mao Zedong (communist leader of mainland China), said that he would use its principles to conquer China. So, it has had an impact upon history, too! There are even business books written on its principles! Some have found similarities between it and mathematician's, John Conway's, "Percolation Theory" that is used in the prediction of the spread of infectious diseases and forest fires.
You can find all of the "Hikaru No Go" videos on YouTube.com. They're pretty interesting - worth watching the first couple ones, anyway! A lot of younger players come to the game via Japanese anime "Hikaru no Go". They learn of the game, want to learn how to play it, then get hooked on it!
There is even a university degree you can get from Myongji University in Korea - just for this game!
It's an official "brain sport", too.
The game is quick and easy to learn. It's got less rules than chess, for example.
Kids and Beginners welcome!