top | item 12662067

(no title)

nathan-wall | 9 years ago

> Chess problems with 5 pieces on the board. How helpful would practicing these be to solving problems with 6 pieces?

Another anecdote: I experienced a noticeable improvement in my abilities at Chess by studying and playing Go. I'm still not real good at Chess because I haven't studied it, but I can now beat people I didn't used to be able to beat.

discuss

order

karmakaze|9 years ago

I've had a similar experience where playing Go made be better at living life, and being away from the game and living made me better at Go when I expected to be set back. This probably only applies at kyu levels but I did find it surprising.

randall|9 years ago

A completely arbitrary related concept: I'm much better at running my startup now than before I played StarCraft seriously.

StarCraft made me a more strategic thinker and it's why I think it might not surprise people that Emmett Shear (ceo of twitch) is really good at StarCraft.

I played casually in the early days, but a few years back I wanted to get decent enough to play online regularly, and it changed our company for the better.

biot|9 years ago

Sounds like Go is the Lisp of board games?

"Lisp is worth learning for the profound enlightenment experience you will have when you finally get it; that experience will make you a better programmer for the rest of your days, even if you never actually use Lisp itself a lot."

viewer5|9 years ago

> playing Go made be better at living life

Would you mind talking about that some more, please?

hilop|9 years ago

Do you know specifically how your play changed?

nathan-wall|9 years ago

As I said, I'm not a strong chess player and don't know much about strategies. I think my reading ability is primarily what improved.