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Encyclopedia > Byoyomi

Byo-yomi is an extended time control in two-player games, specifically Shogi and Go. The word is borrowed from Japanese and literally means "reading the seconds".


A typical time control for amateur tournaments is "60 minutes + 30 seconds byo_yomi", which means that each player may make as many or as few moves as he chooses during his first 60 minutes of thinking time, but after the hour is exhausted, he must make each move in thirty seconds or less. To enforce byo_yomi, a third person or a game clock is necessary.


In professional Go games, a player has several byo-yomi periods, for example five periods of one minute each. If a player makes his move within a one-minute period, he retains all five periods for his future moves. If a player oversteps one minute, he starts the following move in the second rather than the first byo-yomi period. In effect, the player has one minute per move plus four extra one-minute packets which may be arbitrarily distributed, e.g. four moves of two minutes each, or one move of five minutes, or any other combination.


When analog game clocks are used to enforce byo-yomi, it is more convenient to assign additional time for a block of moves, rather than for each move. In Canadian byo-yomi, a player typically gets 5 minutes for 10 to 20 moves. The Internet Go Server (IGS) uses a similar system, but the byo-yomi time is variable and always covers 25 moves. Thus the time control "20 minutes + 15 minutes byoyomi" on IGS means that after the initial 20 minutes of thinking time are over, a player is granted 15 additional minutes, which may be spent however he chooses. If these minutes expire before he has made 25 more moves, he loses. If he makes 25 more moves in less than 15 minutes, he is granted another 15 minutes of byo-yomi, and so on indefinitely.


Unused time during one byo-yomi period does not carry forward to future moves. This is in contrast to the time controls typical on the Internet Chess Club such as "5 minutes + 12 seconds per move". Under this time control each player has twelve seconds added to his clock after every move, starting from the first move, regardless of how much time he spends on each move. Thus if a player thinks for eight seconds before making his first move, he will have five minutes and four seconds on his clock after making it.




  Results from FactBites:
 
Time control - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (483 words)
In tournament Shogi and Go, players generally have a set limit for all of their moves, after which the byoyomi rule goes into effect.
Bobby Fischer proposed (and attempted to patent) a time control concept similar to byoyomi, but which would be in effect from the start of the game.
Each player is allowed a large block of time (say 30 minutes), which should be used on complicated moves, and a small amount of time (say 30 seconds) on each move before the main bank would begin to decline.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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