Most wars are decided long before the first battle-this book shows you how.The Weiqi Art of War (Combined Edition - Revised and Expanded) is a strategic and philosophical work that uses the ancient game of Weiqi (Go) as a living map for understanding conflict, power, and decision-making in the modern world.Rather than focusing on battles, tactics, or rules of the game, this book explores how wars are actually won: through positioning, timing, patience, and influence applied over long periods of time. In Weiqi, victory is rarely achieved through direct attack. It emerges quietly, often long before either side realises the outcome is inevitable. The same, the author argues, is true of life.Written as a series of short, reflective chapters, the book moves fluidly between strategy, Taoist philosophy, internal martial arts, business, politics, and lived experience. The Weiqi board becomes a mirror of reality itself-where every decision reshapes future possibilities, and where the most powerful moves are often the least visible.The combined single-volume edition unfolds in three connected movements. It begins with perception and stillness: learning how to see the "board" before acting at all. It then moves into applied strategy, showing how Weiqi principles operate in real-world systems such as competition, negotiation, leadership, and long-form conflict. Finally, it expands outward to civilisation-scale dynamics-geopolitics, economics, technology, and historical cycles-revealing war not as an event, but as an ongoing process shaped by decisions made far in advance.Throughout the book, Weiqi is paired with Baguazhang as its tactical counterpart, and the I-Ching as its consultative guide. Together, they form a unified view of strategy in which force is a last resort, retreat can be a weapon, and clarity is more decisive than aggression.This is not a book about learning how to play Go.It is a book about recognising the game you are already playing.For strategists, martial artists, business thinkers, and readers drawn to Taoist or non-Western approaches to power, The Weiqi Art of War offers a higher vantage point-one where winning is less about conquest, and more about alignment, awareness, and knowing when not to make a move.