Which of the 4.30023359390* possibilities will happen in the year 2100?
*The maximum number of movements on the Go board
Go game is certainly an interesting choice if you want to tell a story about a landscape but; isn’t a wooden board a provocative place to talk about the operations of nature?
The ancient game of Go originated about 4000 years ago, where you use black and white stones on a board with simple squares, aiming to be in balance to win.
There is only one rule: surround your opponent’s pieces to get the largest area on the board. In reality, protecting all your pieces on the board is much more challenging than it appears. Connecting your pieces gracefully and securing your influence area on the board is essential to keeping them alive. You can defeat your opponent when your creation becomes a perfectly functioning mechanism on a grid board when pieces connect through connections.
To accomplish this, you may have to make risky choices later in the game; you may lose your tiles, or miss the right moment. Stones merge, become stronger, attack, shrink, die, and then reappear. Then again, isn’t that how nature works?
Would it have been possible for nature to leave its organisms vulnerable at certain times so that they could regenerate and grow? Is nature able to fight against itself?
Each ecoregion, each landscape, has its own unique story to tell. Architecture can take on many forms due to a variety of factors.
To fit nature into a space or to let nature shape it?