Portal:Go (game)
Appearance
	
	
(Redirected from Portal:Go)
Welcome to the Go Portal
Introduction
Selected article -
Go is an abstract strategy board game for two players in which the aim is to fence off more territory than the opponent. The game was invented in China more than 2,500 years ago and is believed to be the oldest board game continuously played to the present day. A 2016 survey by the International Go Federation's 75 member nations found that there are over 46 million people worldwide who know how to play Go, and over 20 million current players, the majority of whom live in East Asia. (Full article...)
| List of selected articles | 
|---|
General images
The following are images from various Go-related articles on Wikipedia.
Selected image
Top international title holders
| Rank | Player | Association | Titles | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lee Changho |  South Korea | 17 | 
| 2 | Lee Sedol |  South Korea | 14 | 
| 3 | Cho Hunhyun |  South Korea | 9 | 
| 4 | Gu Li |  China | 8 | 
| Ke Jie |  China | ||
| Shin Jinseo |  South Korea | ||
| 7 | Yoo Changhyuk |  South Korea | 6 | 
| 8 | Park Junghwan |  South Korea | 5 | 
| 9 | Chang Hao |  China | 3 | 
| Kong Jie |  China | ||
| Tang Weixing |  China | ||
| Chen Yaoye |  China | ||
| Ding Hao |  China | 
Top 10 WikiProject Go Popular articles of the month
This following Go-related articles is a most visited articles of WikiProject Go, See complete list at Wikipedia:WikiProject Go/Popular pages.
Topics
Subcategories
Related portals
Related WikiProjects
Associated Wikimedia
The following Wikimedia Foundation sister projects provide more on this subject:
- 
Commons
 Free media repository
- 
Wikibooks
 Free textbooks and manuals
- 
Wikidata
 Free knowledge base
- 
Wikinews
 Free-content news
- 
Wikiquote
 Collection of quotations
- 
Wikisource
 Free-content library
- 
Wikiversity
 Free learning tools
- 
Wiktionary
 Dictionary and thesaurus
Sources
Discover Wikipedia using portals
 
	











































![Image 46The illustration [A] displays the four "liberties" (adjacent empty points) of a single black stone. Illustrations [B], [C], and [D] show White reducing those liberties progressively by one. In [D], when Black has only one liberty left, that stone is under attack and about to be captured and eliminated (a state called atari). White may capture that stone (remove it from the board) with a play on its last liberty (at D-1). (from Go (game))](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/dc/Golibs.png/120px-Golibs.png)















































