Go lessons in German
Germany has one of the deepest Go cultures outside Asia — a large, old federation, strong clubs in most cities, and a competitive scene that has produced some of Europe's best players. But even the strongest German-speaking teachers are amateurs, and there is a real ceiling to how far club instruction can take a serious player.
Live translation lifts that ceiling. Your teacher coaches in their own language while captions render every word into German on the shared board, and your questions go back in theirs. You reach an actual professional — the level above anything the local scene can offer — without giving up German for the explanations that are easy to lose in a second language.
Every teacher here is pro-level or stronger, with the exact rank on each profile.
Common questions
Do I need to speak the teacher's language?
No. The lesson comes to you in German through live captions, and your questions are translated back. German is all you need to bring.
Why study with a foreign teacher instead of a German one?
Germany's teaching tops out at strong amateur. To study with a certified or pro-level player you have to cross a language barrier — and translation removes it, so you get that instruction in German.
.jpg?token=eyJraWQiOiJzdG9yYWdlLXVybC1zaWduaW5nLWtleV81MjdjMzU1Yy04M2I1LTQ2NTEtYTBjYi0yZTgxYzAxZTk5ZGYiLCJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJ1cmwiOiJiYWR1ay10ZWFjaGVyL3Rhbmd0aWFueXVhbjIgKDEpLmpwZyIsInNjb3BlIjoiZG93bmxvYWQiLCJpYXQiOjE3ODEzNjMyNjksImV4cCI6NDkzNDk2MzI2OX0.5dmjvpybRfXw9kICIIeWuuftJXug2FI1ZtWZwctGytE)
.jpeg?token=eyJraWQiOiJzdG9yYWdlLXVybC1zaWduaW5nLWtleV81MjdjMzU1Yy04M2I1LTQ2NTEtYTBjYi0yZTgxYzAxZTk5ZGYiLCJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJ1cmwiOiJiYWR1ay10ZWFjaGVyL3Bhbndlbmp1biAoMSkuanBlZyIsImlhdCI6MTc4MDM2MDU5MywiZXhwIjo0OTMzOTYwNTkzfQ.jw4QFxC444-31jbJ6snPJMxxRQC6jkFGM9whIEcwMc0)



