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Avalanche opening : ウィキペディア英語版
Avalanche joseki

The avalanche joseki (''nadare joseki'' in Japanese) is one of the most celebrated joseki in the opening stage game of Go, and the one that has been most deeply studied in modern times. Hundreds of unique variations have appeared in high-level games. Aside from the taisha joseki, which has traditionally been said to have more than 1000 known variations, the avalanche is thought to be the most complex ''joseki''; but the ''nadare'' fits much better with current ideas on opening strategy and is often used, while the ''taisha'' has been quite unfashionable for a generation as the 5-3 corner opening has gone out of favor.
==Sequence of moves==

The avalanche occurs after the moves 1 (3—4), 2 (5—4), 3 (5—3), and 4 (4—4). The moves 5 (4—3) and 6 (3—5) then always follow (image at right). There is then a five-way choice for the next play. Point a (6—4) leads to the small avalanche (''konadare'') and b (6—3) to the large avalanche (''onadare'').

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Avalanche joseki」の詳細全文を読む



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