Matrx Gipf
One of the tough things to learn is choosing which potential you will bring into the game, in particular during your first games. You will have no clue yet in which situations the different potentials can be strong. Oftentimes you will think you picked the wrong potential. So be it. Do not look back: play with what you have on the board. You have to maneuver the potentials into positions where they can become threats, and not necessarily create threats with the moves with which you bring them into play. The potentials are not all equally strong—but they can all be equally dangerous. They should also be considered not just as containers of special abilities, but first and foremost as pieces that can occupy spots for your color. And regardless of their different strengths, they are part of the cycle of getting pieces back into your reserve, in order for you to be able to keep playing when your turn comes around.