The board is in two pieces, which are normally held together by a magnetic strip.
It is here shown dismantled.
It is has a 19×19 board on one side and has a 13x13 board on the other side.
The board is in two pieces, which are normally held together by a magnetic strip.
It is here shown dismantled.
It is has a 19x19 board on one side and has a 13x13 board on the other side.
The board is in two pieces, which are normally held together by a magnetic strip.
It is here shown dismantled.
The board is in two pieces, which are normally held together by a magnetic strip.
It is here shown dismantled.
Sunjang Baduk is the name given to the ancient Korean form of Go. It became vitually extinct as Korea entered the 1950s. KGS does not support the traditional form of scoring in this game (see Senseis Library for more info), so we play using (KGS) Japanese scoring.
| Posn | No | Name | Rank | Club | Country | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Wins | MMS | SOS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | Matthew Macfadyen | 6d | Leamington | UK | 14+ | 6+ | 5+ | 7+ | 8+ | 4+ | 6 | 6 | 23 |
The bar was at 8k. Handicap and no-komi games are in red.
Across the Board was a travelling exhibition from the British Museum. It featured board games of all types from around the world including Go, Chess, Chinese Chess, Tables, Senet, Ludo, Mancala, Snakes and Ladders, and Monopoly and others.