The Strategic Deconstruction of the 3-5 Point Kosumi-Tsuke: Analyzing High-Level Counter-Tactics
AI Video Technical Guide
Convert this technical guide into a high-quality video with professional voiceover and relevant graphics.
Login to Generate Video GuideAnalyzing the 3-5 Point Kosumi-Tsuke
The 3-5 point, while less common in modern AI-influenced play, remains a potent tool for dictating the tempo of a game. When an opponent employs the Kosumi-Tsuke (diagonal attachment) as a response to a high-approach, it immediately creates a binary choice between territorial stability and external influence. This guide explores the intricate mechanics of this specific interaction.
Tactical Mechanics and Variations
- The Passive Response: Utilizing the solid connection to force the opponent into over-concentration. This is essential when building a framework on the adjacent side.
- The Active Pincer: When the local board state allows, a wide pincer at the five-space distance creates a magnetic field, forcing the opponent to decide between life inside the corner or emerging into a disadvantageous fight.
- The Turn and Extend: A professional-grade tactic involving the hane-and-connect sequence that prioritizes the stability of the corner group while maintaining the flexibility to Tenuki.
Common Strategic Errors
A frequent error is over-valuing the corner territory at the cost of global sente. Amateurs often prioritize the immediate capture of stones, ignoring the fact that AI-driven strategy mandates a 'weight' distribution across the entire board. When responding to the Kosumi-Tsuke, one must evaluate whether the resulting wall contributes to a miai-based framework or if it merely serves as a self-contained, low-efficiency group.
Professional Training Drills
To master this, execute 50 iterations of the 'corner-in-isolation' problem set where you must minimize the opponent's eye space while simultaneously creating a forcing move (kikashi) on the outer edge. Use software to identify the exact turn at which a local joseki becomes 'Gote-heavy' versus 'Sente-dominant'. Focus on the transition point between the two phases of the exchange, ensuring that your final stone placement provides future utility in the middle-game expansion phase.