Taikyoku shogi
Encyclopedia
Taikyoku shōgi is a large board variant
of shogi
(Japan
ese chess
). The game was created around the mid 16th century (presumably by priests) and is based on earlier large board shogi games. Before the rediscovery of taikyoku shogi in 1997, tai shogi
was believed to be the largest playable chess variant (if not board game) ever. It has not been shown that taikyoku shogi was ever widely played. One game may be played over several long sessions and require each player to make over a thousand moves.
Because the game was found only recently after centuries of obscurity, it is difficult to say exactly what all the rules were. Several documents describing the game have been found; however, there are differences between them. Many of the pieces appear in other shogi variants but their moves may be different. The board, and likewise the pieces, were made much smaller, making archeological finds difficult to decipher. Research into this game continues for historical and cultural reasons, but also to satisfy the curious and those who wish to play what could be the most challenging chess-like game ever made. More research must be done however. This article focuses on one likely set of rules that can make the game playable in modern times but is by no means canon. These rules may change as more discoveries are made and secrets of the game unlocked.
, maka dai dai shogi
, and tenjiku shogi
. The most notable differences lie with the piece movements and their promotions.
; however, in practice a player resigns when checkmated. Unlike standard shogi, pieces may not be dropped back into play after being captured.
Each player has a set of 402 wedge-shaped pieces of 209 different types. In all, the players must remember 253 different moves. The pieces are of slightly different sizes with the larger pieces near the king and becoming progressively smaller for pieces further from the king, regardless of power. In general, the stronger pieces are nearer to the king.
Several of the English names were chosen to correspond to rough equivalents in Western chess, rather than as translations of the Japanese names.
Each piece has its name in the form of two or three kanji
written on its face. On the reverse side of some pieces are two or three other characters, often in a different color (commonly red instead of black); this reverse side is used to indicate that the piece has been promoted during play. The pieces of the two sides do not differ in color, but instead each piece is shaped like a wedge, and faces forward, toward the opposing side. This shows who controls the piece during play.
Listed below are the pieces of the game and, if they promote, which pieces they promote to; starting with the first row.
Each piece on the game moves in a characteristic pattern. Pieces move either orthogonally (that is, forward, backward, left, or right, in the direction of one of the arms of a plus sign, +), or diagonally (in the direction of one of the arms of a multiplication sign, ×). The lion, lion hawk and knight are exceptions at the beginning of the game, in that they do not move, or are not required to move, in a straight line. (The Buddhist spirit, teaching king, heavenly horse and furious fiend are similar, but they only appear as pieces promote.)
Some pieces move only one square at a time. (If a friendly piece occupies an adjacent square, the moving piece may not move in that direction; if an opposing piece is there, it may be displaced and captured.)
The step movers are the crown prince, generals (except: bishop, rook, pig, vice, great and wood), wolves, earth dragon, running horse, running rabbit, turtle snake, mountain dove, flying swallow, rain dragon, mountain stag, running pup, running serpent, side serpent, yaksha, Buddhist devil, violent stag, drunken elephant, neighboring king, chariots (except: reverse, running and copper), right tiger, left tiger, wind dragon, free pup, rushing bird, old kite, bears (except running), side boar, cloud eagle, flying cat, little standard, cloud dragon, soldiers (except soldier and chariot), violent ox, dark spirit, deva, howling dog, side mover, prancing stag, ferocious leopard, fierce eagle, poisonous snake, flying goose, strutting crow, blind dog, Chinese cock, phoenix, kirin, side ox, angry boar, liberated horse, flying cock, monkeys, barbarians, vermillion sparrow, swooping owl, old rat, cat sword, swallow’s wings, blind tiger, side flyer, coiled serpent, reclining dragon, go between, dog, vertical mover, vertical pup, vertical horse, dragon horse, dragon king and pawn.
Some pieces can move along a limited number (2 to 7) of free (empty) squares along a straight line in certain directions. Other than the limited distance, they move like ranging pieces (see below).
The limited ranging pieces are the king, standards, free dream-eater, wooden dove, dragons (except: rain, side, wind, cloud, flying and reclining), demons, beast cadet, mountain eagle, white tiger, ceramic dove, mountain dove, captive officer, mountain stag, side serpent, great dove, running tiger, running bear, yaksha, Buddhist devil, guardian of the Gods, wrestler, gold chariot, running stag, beast officer, free pup, rushing bird, old kite, peacock, phoenix master, kirin master, silver chariot, vertical bear, pig general, chicken general, horse general, ox general, silver rabbit, golden deer, captive cadet, great stag, stone chariot, cloud eagle, mountain falcon, vertical tiger, copper chariot, golden bird, prancing stag, water buffalo, fierce eagle, water general, mountain general, fire general, turtles, vertical wolf, donkey, enchanted badger, flying horse, angry boar, violent bear, liberated horse, barbarians, center master, roc master, horseman, soldiers (except: rook, ram’s-head, spear and sword), wing general, wind general, wood general, great master and roaring dog.
Several pieces can jump, that is, they can pass over any intervening piece, whether friend or foe, with no effect on either.
The jumping pieces are the wooden dove, running horse, mountain eagle, phoenix master, kirin master, knight, lion, great stag, vice general, flying cat, mountain falcon, golden bird, flying dragon, poisonous snake, phoenix, kirin, turtles, treacherous fox, center master, roc master, free eagle, lion hawk, great master, horned falcon, soaring eagle, roaring dog and lion dog.
Many pieces can move any number of empty squares along a straight line, limited only by the edge of the board. If an opposing piece intervenes, it may be captured by moving to that square and removing it from the board. A ranging piece must stop where it captures, and cannot bypass a piece that is in its way. If a friendly piece intervenes, the moving piece is limited to a distance that stops short of the intervening piece; if the friendly piece is adjacent, it cannot move in that direction at all.
The ranging pieces are the standards, free king, free dream-eater, wooden dove, dragons (except: violent, flying and reclining), demons, running horse, mountain eagle, whale, running rabbit, tigers (except blind), turtle snake, ceramic dove, lance, oxcart, chariots, flying swallow, running pup, running serpent, great dove, running bear, running stag, running wolf, free pup, phoenix master, kirin master, vertical bear, side boar, silver rabbit, golden deer, great stag, cloud eagle, bishop, rook, side wolf, mountain falcon, soldiers (except: sword, burning and cross-bow), violent ox, golden bird, white horse, howling dog, side mover, water buffalo, turtles, vertical wolf, side ox, liberated horse, treacherous fox, roc master, vermillion sparrow, horseman, swallow’s wings, side flyer, great master, side monkey, vertical mover, flying ox, vertical pup, vertical horse, dragon horse, dragon king, horned falcon, soaring eagle, roaring dog and lion dog.
The hook mover, long-nosed goblin, Capricorn, and peacock can move any number of squares along a straight line, as a normal ranging piece, but may also abruptly change tack left or right by 90° at any one place along the route, and then continue as a ranging piece. Turning a corner like this is optional.
The range covered by a hook move is the equivalent of two moves by a rook, or two moves by a bishop, depending on the piece. However, a hook move is functionally a single move: The piece cannot capture twice in one move, nor may it capture and then move on. It must stop before an intervening piece (unless it first changes direction to avoid it), and must stop when it captures, just like any other ranging piece. It can only change direction once per move.
The lion and lion hawk may take multiple (2) steps in a single turn. These do not have to be in a line, so these pieces can potentially reach every square within two or three steps of the starting square, not just squares along one of the diagonals or orthogonals. Such moves are also useful to get around obstructions. An area mover must stop where it captures.
The golden bird and several promoted pieces have the option of jumping a limited number of squares, and then continuing on in the same direction as a ranging piece.
The ancient dragon may jump over any number of pieces, friend or foe, along a straight line, but only when making a capture. Otherwise it moves as a ranging piece.
The great general, vice general, rook general, bishop general, violent dragon and flying crocodile may jump over any number of pieces, friend or foe, along a diagonal or orthogonal. They capture all pieces they jump.
However, they may only jump pieces of lower rank, whether friend or foe. The relevant ranking is:
Crown prince, left general and right general
Gold general and violent wolf
Rear standard
Free king
Free dream-eater
Wooden dove
Earth dragon
The Japanese Wikipedia describes another set of movements for this piece.
Free demon
The Japanese Wikipedia describes another set of movements for this piece.
Running horse
Beast cadet
Long-nosed goblin (tengu)
Unlike in other shogi variants, in taikyoku the tengu cannot move orthogonally, and therefore can only reach half of the squares on the board. This is the move of the capricorn, and may be an error.
Mountain eagle (right)
Mountain eagle (left)
Fire demon
It cannot burn other pieces as in tenjiku shogi
.”
Whale
Running Rabbit
White tiger
Turtle-snake
Ceramic dove
Lance, oxcart and savage tiger
Reverse Chariot
Mountain dove
Flying swallow
Captive officer
Rain dragon
Forest demon
Mountain stag
Running pup and running serpent
Side serpent
Great dove
Running tiger and running bear
Yaksha
Buddhist devil
Guardian of the Gods
Wrestler
Silver general and violent stag
Drunken elephant and neighboring king
Gold chariot
Side dragon
Running stag
Running wolf
Bishop general
Rook general
Right tiger
Left tiger
Right dragon
Left dragon
Beast officer
Wind dragon
Free pup
Rushing bird
Old kite (hawk)
Peacock
Water dragon
Fire dragon
Copper general
Phoenix master
Kirin master
Silver chariot
Vertical bear
Knight
Pig general
Chicken general and pup general
Horse general and ox general
Center standard and front standard
Side boar
Silver rabbit
Golden deer
Lion
Captive cadet
Great stag
Violent dragon
Woodland demon
Vice general
Great general
Stone chariot
Cloud eagle
Bishop
Because it cannot move orthogonally, a bishop can only reach half the squares on the board.
Rook, soldier, running chariot and square mover
Side wolf
Flying cat
Mountain falcon
Vertical tiger
Little standard
Cloud dragon
Copper chariot
Ram’s-head soldier
Violent ox
Great dragon
Golden bird
Dark spirit
Deva
Wood chariot
White horse
Howling dog (left and right)
Side mover
Prancing stag
Water buffalo
Ferocious leopard
Fierce eagle
Flying dragon
Poisonous snake
Flying goose
Strutting crow
Blind dog and Chinese cock
Water general and mountain general
Fire general
Phoenix
Kirin
Hook mover
Little turtle
Great turtle
Capricorn
Tile chariot
Vertical wolf
Side ox
Donkey and enchanted badger
Flying horse
Angry boar
Violent bear
Evil Wolf
Liberated horse
Flying cock
Old monkey
Northern barbarian and southern barbarian
Eastern barbarian and western barbarian
Treacherous fox
Center master
Roc master
Earth chariot
Vermilion sparrow
Blue dragon
Horseman
Swooping owl and old rat
Climbing monkey
Cat sword
Because it cannot move orthogonally, a cat sword can only reach half the squares on the board.
Swallow’s wings
Blind monkey
Blind tiger
Side flyer
Blind bear
Coiled serpent
Reclining dragon
Free eagle
Lion hawk
Chariot soldier
Side soldier
Vertical soldier
Wind general and river general
Horse soldier and ox soldier
Wood general
Earth general and go between
Boar soldier, leopard soldier and bear soldier
Stone general
Because it cannot move orthogonally or backward, a stone general can only reach less than half the squares on the board.
Tile general and sword soldier
Iron general and dog
Great standard
Great master
Right chariot
Left chariot
Side monkey
Vertical mover
Flying Ox
Longbow soldier
Vertical pup
Vertical horse
Burning soldier
Dragon horse
Dragon king
Horned falcon
Soaring eagle
Spear soldier
Vertical leopard
Cross-bow soldier
Roaring dog
Lion dog
Pawn
This is all very different from smaller shogi variants, where pieces promote when they cross a promotion zone (the enemy camp), and where promotion is optional. The dots on the taikyoku shogi board that would represent promotion zones in other games are only there as placement guides for the initial setup of the two camps.
Some pieces promote, or demote, to a piece that exists in the initial setup of the board. However, such a piece cannot then promote a second time as its namesake does. For example, a bishop promotes to a dragon horse. However, while a ferocious leopard promotes to a bishop on its first capturing move, it does not promote to a dragon horse on its second. Rather, it remains a bishop for the rest of the game.
If a Lance, oxcart, savage tiger, side dragon, running wolf, knight, angry boar, evil wolf, flying cock, wood general, stone general, iron general, dog, pawn, running leopard, free wolf or raiding falcon reaches the furthest rank; it must remain there until it captures or is captured.
Free bird
Great dream-eater
Ancient dragon
Heavenly Tetrarch king
Great falcon
Great elephant
Fire ox and violent wind
Strong bear
Right phoenix
Running leopard
Thunder runner
Rain demon
Free boar
Free dog
Running ox
Great horse
Cavalier and strong chariot
Free fire
Burning chariot
Free stag and strong eagle
Free dragon and free tiger
Flying crocodile
Divine tiger
Divine dragon
Divine turtle
Divine sparrow
Free serpent and coiled dragon
Free wolf
Great tiger
Right dog
Left dog
Free bear, free leopard and great whale
Running boar
Heavenly horse
Spear general
Great leopard
Flying stag and copper elephant
Right army
Left army
Beast bird and captive bird
Gliding swallow
Buddhist spirit
Teaching king
Great shark
Furious fiend
Leopard king
Goose wing
Left iron chariot
Right iron chariot
Plodding ox
Wind snapping turtle
Running tile
Young bird
Playful cockatoo
Walking heron
Tiger soldier
Running dragon
Heavenly Tetrarch
Elephant king
Peaceful mountain
Chinese river
Free chicken
Free ox, free horse and free pig
Longbow general
Burning general
Cross-bow general
Mountain crane
Rushing boar
Sword general
Bird of paradise and multi general
Bear’s eyes and venomous wolf
Mountain witch
Flying falcon
Spirit turtle
Treasure turtle
Great bear
Wizard stork
Raiding falcon
Great eagle
, and effectively wins the game.
Unlike Western chess, a player need not move out of check, and indeed may even move into check. Although obviously not often a good idea, a player with more than one royal (king or crown prince) may occasionally sacrifice one of these pieces as part of a gambit
.
A player is not allowed to give perpetual check
to the sole objective piece.
A player who makes an illegal move loses immediately. (This rule may be relaxed in casual games.)
Another possible, if rather uncommon, way for a game to end is repetition (sennichite). If the same position occurs four times with the same player to play, then the game is no contest
. Recall, however, the prohibition against perpetual check.
, but differs in several respects. Modifications have been made for taikyoku shogi.
A typical example is P-12h.
The first letter represents the piece moved (see above).
Promoted pieces have a + added in front of the letter. (e.g., +CC for a wizard stork (promoted Chinese cock). The designation of the piece is followed by a symbol indicating the type of move: - for an ordinary move or x for a capture. Next is the designation for the square on which the piece lands. This consists of a number representing the file and a lowercase letter representing the rank, with 1a being the top right corner (as seen from Black's point of view) and 36jj being the bottom left corner. (This method of designating squares is based on Japanese convention, which, however, uses Japanese numerals
instead of letters. For example, the square 2c is denoted by 2三 in Japanese.)
If a lion, golden bird, heavenly tetrarch king or teaching king captures by 'igui’, the square of the piece being captured is used instead of the destination square, and this is preceded by the symbol !. If a double capture is made, than it is added after the first capture.
If a move forces the player to promote the piece, then a + is added to the end to signify that the promotion was taken. For example, ORx7c+ indicates an old rat capturing on 7c and promoting.
In cases where the above notation would be ambiguous, the designation of the start square is added after the designation for the piece in order to make clear which piece is meant.
Moves are commonly numbered as in chess.
Shogi variant
Many variants of shogi have been developed over the centuries, ranging from some of the largest chess-type games ever played to some of the smallest...
of shogi
Shogi
, also known as Japanese chess, is a two-player board game in the same family as Western chess, chaturanga, and Chinese Xiangqi, and is the most popular of a family of chess variants native to Japan...
(Japan
Japan
Japan is an island nation in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south...
ese chess
Chess
Chess is a two-player board game played on a chessboard, a square-checkered board with 64 squares arranged in an eight-by-eight grid. It is one of the world's most popular games, played by millions of people worldwide at home, in clubs, online, by correspondence, and in tournaments.Each player...
). The game was created around the mid 16th century (presumably by priests) and is based on earlier large board shogi games. Before the rediscovery of taikyoku shogi in 1997, tai shogi
Tai shogi
Tai shogi is a large-board variant of shogi . The game dates to the 15th century and is based on earlier largeboard shogi games...
was believed to be the largest playable chess variant (if not board game) ever. It has not been shown that taikyoku shogi was ever widely played. One game may be played over several long sessions and require each player to make over a thousand moves.
Because the game was found only recently after centuries of obscurity, it is difficult to say exactly what all the rules were. Several documents describing the game have been found; however, there are differences between them. Many of the pieces appear in other shogi variants but their moves may be different. The board, and likewise the pieces, were made much smaller, making archeological finds difficult to decipher. Research into this game continues for historical and cultural reasons, but also to satisfy the curious and those who wish to play what could be the most challenging chess-like game ever made. More research must be done however. This article focuses on one likely set of rules that can make the game playable in modern times but is by no means canon. These rules may change as more discoveries are made and secrets of the game unlocked.
Rules of the game
Taikyoku shogi is very different from other large-board shogi variants: dai dai shogiDai dai shogi
Daidai shōgi is a large board variant of shogi . The game dates back to the 15th century and is based on the earlier Dai shogi. Apart from its size, the major difference is in the range of the pieces and the “promotion by capture” rule. It is the smallest board variant to use this rule.-...
, maka dai dai shogi
Maka dai dai shogi
Maka daidai shōgi is a large board variant of shogi . The game dates back to the 15th century and is based on dai dai shogi and the earlier dai shogi. The three Edo-era sources are not congruent in their descriptions of the pieces not found in smaller games...
, and tenjiku shogi
Tenjiku shogi
Tenjiku shogi is a large-board variant of shogi . The game dates back to the 15th or 16th century and was based on the earlier chu shogi, which itself was based on dai shogi.- Objective :The objective of the game is to capture the opponent's king and, if present, the crown prince, which counts as...
. The most notable differences lie with the piece movements and their promotions.
Objective
The objective of the game is to capture the opponent's king(s) and crown prince(s). When the last of these is captured, the game ends. There are no rules for check or checkmateCheckmate
Checkmate is a situation in chess in which one player's king is threatened with capture and there is no way to meet that threat. Or, simply put, the king is under direct attack and cannot avoid being captured...
; however, in practice a player resigns when checkmated. Unlike standard shogi, pieces may not be dropped back into play after being captured.
Game equipment
Two players, Black and White (or 先手 sente and 後手 gote), play on a board ruled into a grid of 36 ranks (rows) by 36 files (columns) with a total of 1,296 squares. The squares are undifferentiated by marking or color.Each player has a set of 402 wedge-shaped pieces of 209 different types. In all, the players must remember 253 different moves. The pieces are of slightly different sizes with the larger pieces near the king and becoming progressively smaller for pieces further from the king, regardless of power. In general, the stronger pieces are nearer to the king.
Several of the English names were chosen to correspond to rough equivalents in Western chess, rather than as translations of the Japanese names.
Each piece has its name in the form of two or three kanji
Kanji
Kanji are the adopted logographic Chinese characters hanzi that are used in the modern Japanese writing system along with hiragana , katakana , Indo Arabic numerals, and the occasional use of the Latin alphabet...
written on its face. On the reverse side of some pieces are two or three other characters, often in a different color (commonly red instead of black); this reverse side is used to indicate that the piece has been promoted during play. The pieces of the two sides do not differ in color, but instead each piece is shaped like a wedge, and faces forward, toward the opposing side. This shows who controls the piece during play.
Listed below are the pieces of the game and, if they promote, which pieces they promote to; starting with the first row.
Piece | Kanji Kanji Kanji are the adopted logographic Chinese characters hanzi that are used in the modern Japanese writing system along with hiragana , katakana , Indo Arabic numerals, and the occasional use of the Latin alphabet... |
Rōmaji | Promotes to |
---|---|---|---|
King | 玉将 | gyokushō | — |
Crown prince | 太子 | taishi | king |
Gold general | 金将 | kinshō | rook |
Right general | 右将 | ushō | right army |
Right army | 右軍 | ugun | — |
Left general | 左将 | sashō | left army |
Left army | 左軍 | sagun | — |
Rear standard | 後旗 | kōki | center standard |
Free king | 奔王 | honnō | great general |
Free dream-eater Baku (spirit) are Japanese supernatural beings that devour dreams and nightmares. They have a long history in Japanese folklore and art, and more recently have appeared in Japanese anime and manga .... |
奔獏 | honbaku | free king |
Wooden dove | 鳩槃 | kyūhan | — |
Ceramic dove | 鳩盤 | kyūban | — |
Earth dragon Dilong Dilong Ward is one of the sixteen wards of Mokokchung town. It is located in the lower slope of the town and forms the Northern part of Mokokchung.... |
地龍 | chiryū | rain dragon |
Free demon | 奔鬼 | honki | free king |
Running horse | 走馬 | sōma, sōba | free demon |
Beast cadet | 獣曹 | jūsō | beast officer |
Long-nosed goblin Tengu are a class of supernatural creatures found in Japanese folklore, art, theater, and literature. They are one of the best known yōkai and are sometimes worshipped as Shinto kami... |
天狗 | tengu | — |
Mountain eagle (left and right) | 山鷲 | sanshū | soaring eagle |
Fire demon | 火鬼 | kaki | free fire |
Free fire | 奔火 | honka | — |
Whale | 鯨鯢 | keigei | great whale |
Great whale | 大鯨 | daigei | — |
Running rabbit | 走兎 | sōto | treacherous fox |
White tiger Five elements (Japanese philosophy) One may encounter two kinds of five elements philosophy in Japan. One is called, in Japanese, gogyō , having its backgrounds in the Chinese five elements, and the other is called godai . Godai is usually regarded as a Buddhism term in Japan, with certain influences from Hinduism. The following... |
白虎 | byakko | divine tiger |
Divine tiger | 神虎 | shinko | — |
Turtle-snake Five elements (Japanese philosophy) One may encounter two kinds of five elements philosophy in Japan. One is called, in Japanese, gogyō , having its backgrounds in the Chinese five elements, and the other is called godai . Godai is usually regarded as a Buddhism term in Japan, with certain influences from Hinduism. The following... |
玄武 | genbu | divine turtle |
Divine turtle | 神亀 | shinki | — |
Lance | 香車 | kyōsha | white horse |
Reverse chariot | 反車 | hensha | whale |
Fragrant elephant | 香象 | kōzō | elephant king |
Elephant king | 象王 | zōō | — |
White elephant White elephant A white elephant is an idiom for a valuable but burdensome possession of which its owner cannot dispose and whose cost is out of proportion to its usefulness or worth... |
白象 | hakuzō | elephant king |
Mountain dove | 山鳩 | sankyū | great dove |
Flying swallow | 飛燕 | hien | rook |
Captive officer | 禽吏 | kinri | captive bird |
Captive bird | 禽鳥 | kinchō | — |
Rain dragon | 雨龍 | uryū | great dragon |
Forest demon | 森鬼 | shinki | thunder runner |
Thunder runner | 雷走 | raisō | — |
Mountain stag | 山鹿 | sanroku | great stag |
Running pup | 走狗 | sōku | free leopard |
Free leopard | 奔豹 | honpyō | — |
Running serpent | 走蛇 | sōja | Free serpent |
Free serpent | 奔蛇 | honja | — |
Side serpent | 横蛇 | ōja | great shark |
Great shark | 大鱗 | dairin | — |
Great dove | 大鳩 | daikyū | wooden dove |
Running tiger | 走虎 | sōko | free tiger |
*Free tiger | 奔虎 | honko | — |
Running bear | 走熊 | sōyū | free bear |
*Free bear | 奔熊 | hon’yū | — |
Yaksha Yaksha Yaksha is the name of a broad class of nature-spirits, usually benevolent, who are caretakers of the natural treasures hidden in the earth and tree roots. They appear in Hindu, Jain and Buddhist mythology. The feminine form of the word is ' or Yakshini .In Hindu, Jain, and Buddhist mythology,... |
夜叉 | yasha | Heavenly Tetrarch |
Heavenly Tetrarch | 四天 | shiten | — |
Buddhist devil Rakshasa A Rakshasa or alternatively rakshas, is a race of mythological humanoid beings or unrighteous spirit in Hindu and Buddhist religion... |
羅刹 | rasetsu | Heavenly Tetrarch |
Guardian of the Gods | 金剛 | kongō | Heavenly Tetrarch |
Wrestler Sumo is a competitive full-contact sport where a wrestler attempts to force another wrestler out of a circular ring or to touch the ground with anything other than the soles of the feet. The sport originated in Japan, the only country where it is practiced professionally... |
力士 | rikishi | Heavenly Tetrarch |
Silver general | 銀将 | ginshō | vertical mover |
Drunken elephant | 酔象 | suizō | crown prince |
Neighboring king | 近王 | kinnō | front standard |
Gold chariot | 金車 | kinsha | playful cockatoo |
Playful cockatoo | 遊母 | yūmo | — |
Side dragon | 横龍 | ōryū | running dragon |
Running dragon | 走龍 | sōryū | — |
Running stag | 走鹿 | sōroku | free stag |
Free stag | 奔鹿 | honroku | — |
Running wolf | 走狼 | sōrō | free wolf |
Free wolf | 奔狼 | honrō | — |
Bishop general | 角将 | kakushō | rain demon |
Rain demon | 霖鬼 | rinki | — |
Rook general | 飛将 | hishō | flying crocodile |
Flying crocodile | 飛鰐 | higaku | — |
Right tiger | 右虎 | uko | white tiger |
Left tiger | 左虎 | sako | turtle-snake |
Right dragon | 右龍 | uryū | Blue dragon |
Left dragon | 左龍 | saryū | vermillion sparrow |
Beast officer | 獣吏 | jūri | beast bird |
Beast bird | 獣鳥 | jūchō | — |
Wind dragon | 風龍 | fūryū | free dragon |
Free dragon | 奔龍 | honryū | — |
Free pup | 奔狗 | honku | free dog |
Free dog | 奔犬 | honken | — |
Rushing bird | 行鳥 | gyōchō | free demon |
Old kite Kite (bird) Kites are raptors with long wings and weak legs which spend a great deal of time soaring. Most feed mainly on carrion but some take various amounts of live prey.They are birds of prey which, along with hawks and eagles, are from the family Accipitridae.... |
古鵄 | kotetsu | long-nosed goblin |
Peacock | 孔雀 | kujaku | long-nosed goblin |
Water dragon | 水龍 | suiryū | phoenix master |
Fire dragon | 火龍 | karyū | kirin master |
Copper general | 銅将 | dōshō | side mover |
Phoenix master | 鳳師 | hōshi | — |
Kirin master | 麟師 | rinshi | — |
Silver chariot | 銀車 | ginsha | goose wing |
Goose wing | 鴻翼 | kōyoko | — |
Vertical bear | 竪熊 | shuyū | free bear |
Knight | 桂馬 | keima | side soldier |
Pig general | 豚将 | tonshō | free pig |
Free pig | 奔豚 | honton | — |
Chicken general | 鶏将 | keishō | free chicken |
Free chicken | 奔鶏 | honkei | — |
Pup general | 狗将 | kushō | free pup |
Horse general | 馬将 | bashō | free horse |
Free horse | 奔馬 | honba | — |
Ox general | 牛将 | gyūshō | free ox |
Free ox | 奔牛 | hongyū | — |
Center standard | 中旗 | chūki | front standard |
Side boar | 横猪 | ōcho | free boar |
Free boar | 奔猪 | honcho | — |
Silver rabbit | 銀兎 | ginto | whale |
Golden deer | 金鹿 | konroku | white horse |
Lion | 獅子 | shishi | furious fiend |
Furious fiend | 奮迅 | funjin | — |
Captive cadet | 禽曹 | kinsō | captive officer |
Great stag | 大鹿 | dairoku | free stag |
Violent dragon | 猛龍 | mōryū | great dragon |
Woodland demon | 林鬼 | rinki | right phoenix |
Right phoenix | 右鵰 | ushū | — |
Vice general | 副将 | fukushō | great general |
Great general | 大将 | taishō | — |
Stone chariot | 石車 | sekisha | walking heron |
Walking heron | 歩振 | fushin | — |
Cloud eagle | 雲鷲 | unjū | strong eagle |
Strong eagle | 勁鷲 | keijū | — |
Bishop | 角行 | kakugyō | dragon horse |
Rook | 飛車 | hisha | dragon king |
Side wolf | 横狼 | ōrō | free wolf |
Flying cat | 飛猫 | hibyō | rook |
Mountain falcon | 山鷹 | san’ō | horned falcon |
Vertical tiger | 竪虎 | shuko | free tiger |
Soldier | 兵士 | heishi | cavalier |
Cavalier | 騎士 | kishi | — |
Little standard | 小旗 | shōki | rear standard |
Cloud dragon | 雲龍 | unryū | great dragon |
Copper chariot | 銅車 | dōsha | copper elephant |
Copper elephant | 銅象 | dōzō | — |
Running chariot | 走車 | sōsha | burning chariot |
Burning chariot | 炮車 | hōsha | — |
Ram’s-head soldier | 羊兵 | yōhei | tiger soldier |
Tiger soldier | 虎兵 | kohei | — |
Violent ox | 猛牛 | mōgyū | flying ox |
Great dragon | 大龍 | dairyū | ancient dragon |
Ancient dragon | 元龍 | genryū, ganryū | — |
Golden bird | 金翅 | kinshi | free bird |
Free bird | 奔翅 | honshi | — |
Dark spirit Avidya (Buddhism) Avidyā or avijjā means "ignorance" or "delusion" and is the opposite of 'vidyā' and 'rig pa'... |
無明 | mumyō | Buddhist spirit |
Buddhist spirit | 法性 | hōsei | — |
Deva Deva (Buddhism) A deva in Buddhism is one of many different types of non-human beings who share the characteristics of being more powerful, longer-lived, and, in general, living more contentedly than the average human being.... |
提婆 | daiba | teaching king |
Teaching king | 教王 | kyōō | — |
Wood chariot | 木車 | mokusha | wind snapping turtle |
Wind snapping turtle | 風鼈 | fūbetsu | — |
White horse | 白駒 | hakku | great horse |
Great horse | 大駒 | daiku | — |
Howling dog (left and right) | 口奇犬 | kiken | left dog, right dog |
Right dog | 右犬 | uken | — |
Left dog | 左犬 | saken | — |
Side mover | 横行 | ōgyō | free boar |
Prancing stag | 踊鹿 | yōroku | square mover |
Water buffalo | 水牛 | suigyū | great dream-eater |
Great dream-eater Baku (spirit) are Japanese supernatural beings that devour dreams and nightmares. They have a long history in Japanese folklore and art, and more recently have appeared in Japanese anime and manga .... |
大獏 | daibaku | — |
Ferocious leopard | 猛豹 | mōhyō | bishop |
Fierce eagle | 猛鷲 | mōjū | soaring eagle |
Flying dragon | 飛龍 | hiryū | dragon king |
Poisonous snake | 毒蛇 | dokuja | hook mover |
Flying goose | 鳫飛 | ganhi | swallow’s wings |
Strutting crow | 烏行 | ukō | flying falcon |
Flying falcon | 飛鷹 | hiyō | — |
Blind dog | 盲犬 | mōken | violent stag |
Water general | 水将 | suishō | vice general |
Fire general | 火将 | kashō | great general |
Phoenix Fenghuang Fenghuang are mythological birds of East Asia that reign over all other birds. The males are called Feng and the females Huang. In modern times, however, such a distinction of gender is often no longer made and the Feng and Huang are blurred into a single feminine entity so that the bird can be... |
鳳凰 | hōō | golden bird |
Kirin Qilin The Qilin is a mythical hooved Chinese chimerical creature known throughout various East Asian cultures, and is said to appear with the imminent arrival or passing of a wise sage or an illustrious ruler. It is a good omen that brings rui . It is often depicted with what looks like fire all over... |
麒麟 | kirin | golden bird |
Hook mover | 鉤行 | kōgyō | — |
Little turtle | 小亀 | shōki | treasure turtle |
Treasure turtle | 宝亀 | hōki | — |
Great turtle | 大亀 | daiki | spirit turtle |
Spirit turtle | 霊亀 | reiki | — |
Capricorn | 摩羯 | makatsu | hook mover |
Tile chariot | 瓦車 | gasha | running tile |
Running tile | 走瓦 | sōga | — |
Vertical wolf | 竪狼 | shurō | running wolf |
Side ox | 横牛 | ōgyū | flying ox |
Donkey | 驢馬 | roba | ceramic dove |
Flying horse | 馬麟 | barin | free king |
Violent bear | 猛熊 | mōyū | great bear |
Great bear | 大熊 | daiyū | — |
Angry boar | 嗔猪 | shincho | free boar |
Evil wolf | 悪狼 | akurō | venomous wolf |
Venomous wolf | 毒狼 | dokurō | — |
Liberated horse | 風馬 | fūma | heavenly horse |
Heavenly horse | 天馬 | temma | — |
Flying cock | 鶏飛 | keihi | raiding falcon |
Raiding falcon | 延鷹 | en’yō | — |
Old monkey | 古猿 | koen | mountain witch |
Mountain witch Yama-uba Yamauba, Yamamba or Yamanba are variations on the name of a yōkai found in Japanese folklore.-Description in Classical Japanese Folklore:... |
山母 | sanbo | — |
Chinese cock | 淮鶏 | waikei | wizard stork |
Wizard stork | 仙鷦 | senkaku | — |
Northern barbarian Xiongnu The Xiongnu were ancient nomadic-based people that formed a state or confederation north of the agriculture-based empire of the Han Dynasty. Most of the information on the Xiongnu comes from Chinese sources... |
北狄 | hokuteki | wooden dove |
Southern barbarian | 南蛮 | nanban | golden bird |
Western barbarian Amdo Amdo is one of the three traditional regions of Tibet, the other two being Ü-Tsang and Kham; it is also the birth place of the 14th Dalai Lama. Amdo encompasses a large area from the Machu River to the Drichu river . While culturally and ethnically a Tibetan area, Amdo has been administered by a... |
西戎 | seijū | lion dog |
Eastern barbarian Ebisu (mythology) Ebisu , also transliterated Yebisu or called Hiruko or Kotoshiro-nushi-no-kami , is the Japanese god of fishermen, luck, and workingmen, as well as the guardian of the health of small children... |
東夷 | tōi | lion |
Violent stag | 猛鹿 | mōroku | rushing boar |
Rushing boar | 行猪 | gyōcho | — |
Violent wolf | 猛狼 | mōrō | bear’s eyes |
Bear’s eyes | 熊眼 | yūgan | — |
Treacherous fox | 隠狐 | inko, onko | mountain crane |
Mountain crane | 山鶻 | sankotsu | — |
Center master | 中師 | chūshi | — |
Roc master | 鵬師 | hōshi | — |
Earth chariot | 土車 | dosha | young bird |
Young bird | *尺鳥 | shakuchō | — |
Vermillion sparrow Five elements (Japanese philosophy) One may encounter two kinds of five elements philosophy in Japan. One is called, in Japanese, gogyō , having its backgrounds in the Chinese five elements, and the other is called godai . Godai is usually regarded as a Buddhism term in Japan, with certain influences from Hinduism. The following... |
朱雀 | suzaku | divine sparrow |
Divine sparrow | 神雀 | shinjaku | — |
Blue dragon Five elements (Japanese philosophy) One may encounter two kinds of five elements philosophy in Japan. One is called, in Japanese, gogyō , having its backgrounds in the Chinese five elements, and the other is called godai . Godai is usually regarded as a Buddhism term in Japan, with certain influences from Hinduism. The following... |
青龍 | seiryū | divine dragon |
Divine dragon | 神龍 | shinryū | — |
Enchanted badger | 変狸 | henri | ceramic dove |
Horseman | 騎兵 | kihei | cavalier |
Swooping owl | 鴟行 | shigyō | cloud eagle |
Climbing monkey | 登猿 | tōen | violent stag |
Cat sword | 猫刄 | myōjin | dragon horse |
Swallow’s wings | 燕羽 | en’u | gliding swallow |
Gliding swallow | 燕行 | engyō | — |
Blind monkey | 盲猿 | mōen | flying stag |
Flying stag | 飛鹿 | hiroku | — |
Blind tiger | 盲虎 | mōko | flying stag |
Oxcart | 牛車 | gissha | plodding ox |
Plodding ox | 歬牛 | sengyū | — |
Side flier | 横飛 | ōhi | side dragon |
Blind bear | 盲熊 | mōyū | flying stag |
Old rat | 老鼠 | rōso | bird of paradise |
Bird of paradise | jichō | — | |
Square mover | 方行 | hōgyō | strong chariot |
Strong chariot | 強車 | kyōsha | — |
Coiled serpent | 蟠蛇 | banja | coiled dragon |
Coiled dragon | 蟠龍 | banryū | — |
Reclining dragon | 臥龍 | garyū | great dragon |
Free eagle | 奔鷲 | honjū | — |
Lion hawk | 獅鷹 | shiō | — |
Chariot soldier | 車兵 | shahei | Heavenly Tetrarch king |
Heavenly Tetrarch king | 四天王 | shitennō | — |
Side soldier | 横兵 | ōhei | water buffalo |
Vertical soldier | 竪兵 | shuhei | chariot soldier |
Wind general | 風将 | fūshō | violent wind |
*Violent wind | 暴風 | bōfū | — |
River general | 川将 | senshō | Chinese river |
*Chinese river | 淮川 | waisen | — |
Mountain general | 山将 | sanshō | peaceful mountain |
*Peaceful mountain | 泰山 | taizan | — |
Front standard | 前旗 | zenki | great standard |
Horse soldier | 馬兵 | bahei | running horse |
Wood general | 木将 | mokushō | white elephant |
Ox soldier | 牛兵 | gyūhei | running ox |
*Running ox | 走牛 | sōgyū | — |
Earth general | 土将 | doshō | white elephant |
Boar soldier | 猪兵 | chohei | running boar |
*Running boar | 走猪 | sōcho | — |
Stone general | 石将 | sekishō | white elephant |
Leopard soldier | 豹兵 | hyōhei | running leopard |
*Running leopard | 走豹 | sōhyō | — |
Tile general | 瓦将 | gashō | white elephant |
Bear soldier | 熊兵 | yūhei | strong bear |
*Strong bear | 強熊 | kyōyū | — |
Iron general | 鉄将 | tesshō | white elephant |
Great standard | 大旗 | daiki | — |
Great master | 大師 | daishi | — |
Right chariot | 右車 | usha | right iron chariot |
*Right iron chariot | 右鉄車 | utessha | — |
Left chariot | 左車 | sasha | left iron chariot |
*Left iron chariot | 左鉄車 | satessha | — |
Side monkey | 横猿 | ōen | side soldier |
Vertical mover | 竪行 | shugyō | flying ox |
Flying ox | 飛牛 | higyū | fire ox |
*Fire ox | 火牛 | kagyū | — |
Longbow soldier | 弩兵 | dohei | longbow general |
*Longbow general | 弩将 | doshō | — |
Vertical pup | 竪狗 | shuku | leopard king |
*Leopard king | 豹王 | hyōō | — |
Vertical horse | 竪馬 | shuba | dragon horse |
Burning soldier | 炮兵 | hōhei | burning general |
*Burning general | 炮将 | hōshō | — |
Dragon horse | 龍馬 | ryūme | horned falcon |
Dragon king | 龍王 | ryūō | soaring eagle |
Sword soldier | 刀兵 | tōhei | sword general |
Sword general | 刀将 | tōshō | — |
Horned falcon | 角鷹 | kakuō | great falcon |
*Great falcon | 大鷹 | daiō | — |
Soaring eagle | 飛鷲 | hijū | great eagle |
*Great eagle | 大鷲 | daijū | — |
Spear soldier | 鎗兵 | sōhei | spear general |
*Spear general | 鎗将 | sōshō | — |
Vertical leopard | 竪豹 | shuhyō | great leopard |
*Great leopard | 大豹 | daihyō | — |
Savage tiger | 猛虎 | mōko | great tiger |
*Great tiger | 大虎 | daiko | — |
Cross-bow soldier | 弓兵 | kyūhei | cross-bow general |
*Cross-bow general | 弓将 | kyūshō | — |
Roaring dog | 吼犬 | kōken | lion dog |
Lion dog Komainu , often called lion-dogs in English, are statue pairs of lion-like creatures either guarding the entrance or the inner shrine of many Japanese Shinto shrines or kept inside the inner shrine itself, where they are not visible to the public. The first type, born during the Edo period, is called , the... |
狛犬 | komainu | great elephant |
*Great elephant | 大象 | taizō | — |
Dog | 犬 | inu | multi general |
*Multi general | 雜将 | suishō | — |
Go between | 仲人 | chūnin | drunken elephant |
Pawn | 歩兵 | fuhyō | gold general |
Setup
Below is a diagram showing the setup of one player's pieces. The way one player sees their own pieces is the same way the opposing player will see their pieces.
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Game play
The players alternate making a move, with Black moving first. (The traditional terms 'black' and 'white' are used to differentiate the sides during discussion of the game, but are no longer literally descriptive.) A move consists of moving a single piece on the board and potentially promoting that piece or displacing (capturing) an opposing piece.Movement and capture
Most pieces in the game move in a unique manner. An opposing piece is captured by displacement: That is, if a piece moves to a square occupied by an opposing piece, the opposing piece is displaced and removed from the board. A piece cannot move to a square occupied by a friendly piece (meaning another piece controlled by the moving player).Each piece on the game moves in a characteristic pattern. Pieces move either orthogonally (that is, forward, backward, left, or right, in the direction of one of the arms of a plus sign, +), or diagonally (in the direction of one of the arms of a multiplication sign, ×). The lion, lion hawk and knight are exceptions at the beginning of the game, in that they do not move, or are not required to move, in a straight line. (The Buddhist spirit, teaching king, heavenly horse and furious fiend are similar, but they only appear as pieces promote.)
Categories of movement
Many pieces are capable of several kinds of movement, with the type of movement most often depending on the direction in which they move. The movement categories are:Step movers
Some pieces move only one square at a time. (If a friendly piece occupies an adjacent square, the moving piece may not move in that direction; if an opposing piece is there, it may be displaced and captured.)
The step movers are the crown prince, generals (except: bishop, rook, pig, vice, great and wood), wolves, earth dragon, running horse, running rabbit, turtle snake, mountain dove, flying swallow, rain dragon, mountain stag, running pup, running serpent, side serpent, yaksha, Buddhist devil, violent stag, drunken elephant, neighboring king, chariots (except: reverse, running and copper), right tiger, left tiger, wind dragon, free pup, rushing bird, old kite, bears (except running), side boar, cloud eagle, flying cat, little standard, cloud dragon, soldiers (except soldier and chariot), violent ox, dark spirit, deva, howling dog, side mover, prancing stag, ferocious leopard, fierce eagle, poisonous snake, flying goose, strutting crow, blind dog, Chinese cock, phoenix, kirin, side ox, angry boar, liberated horse, flying cock, monkeys, barbarians, vermillion sparrow, swooping owl, old rat, cat sword, swallow’s wings, blind tiger, side flyer, coiled serpent, reclining dragon, go between, dog, vertical mover, vertical pup, vertical horse, dragon horse, dragon king and pawn.
Limited ranging pieces
Some pieces can move along a limited number (2 to 7) of free (empty) squares along a straight line in certain directions. Other than the limited distance, they move like ranging pieces (see below).
The limited ranging pieces are the king, standards, free dream-eater, wooden dove, dragons (except: rain, side, wind, cloud, flying and reclining), demons, beast cadet, mountain eagle, white tiger, ceramic dove, mountain dove, captive officer, mountain stag, side serpent, great dove, running tiger, running bear, yaksha, Buddhist devil, guardian of the Gods, wrestler, gold chariot, running stag, beast officer, free pup, rushing bird, old kite, peacock, phoenix master, kirin master, silver chariot, vertical bear, pig general, chicken general, horse general, ox general, silver rabbit, golden deer, captive cadet, great stag, stone chariot, cloud eagle, mountain falcon, vertical tiger, copper chariot, golden bird, prancing stag, water buffalo, fierce eagle, water general, mountain general, fire general, turtles, vertical wolf, donkey, enchanted badger, flying horse, angry boar, violent bear, liberated horse, barbarians, center master, roc master, horseman, soldiers (except: rook, ram’s-head, spear and sword), wing general, wind general, wood general, great master and roaring dog.
Jumping pieces
Several pieces can jump, that is, they can pass over any intervening piece, whether friend or foe, with no effect on either.
The jumping pieces are the wooden dove, running horse, mountain eagle, phoenix master, kirin master, knight, lion, great stag, vice general, flying cat, mountain falcon, golden bird, flying dragon, poisonous snake, phoenix, kirin, turtles, treacherous fox, center master, roc master, free eagle, lion hawk, great master, horned falcon, soaring eagle, roaring dog and lion dog.
Ranging pieces
Many pieces can move any number of empty squares along a straight line, limited only by the edge of the board. If an opposing piece intervenes, it may be captured by moving to that square and removing it from the board. A ranging piece must stop where it captures, and cannot bypass a piece that is in its way. If a friendly piece intervenes, the moving piece is limited to a distance that stops short of the intervening piece; if the friendly piece is adjacent, it cannot move in that direction at all.
The ranging pieces are the standards, free king, free dream-eater, wooden dove, dragons (except: violent, flying and reclining), demons, running horse, mountain eagle, whale, running rabbit, tigers (except blind), turtle snake, ceramic dove, lance, oxcart, chariots, flying swallow, running pup, running serpent, great dove, running bear, running stag, running wolf, free pup, phoenix master, kirin master, vertical bear, side boar, silver rabbit, golden deer, great stag, cloud eagle, bishop, rook, side wolf, mountain falcon, soldiers (except: sword, burning and cross-bow), violent ox, golden bird, white horse, howling dog, side mover, water buffalo, turtles, vertical wolf, side ox, liberated horse, treacherous fox, roc master, vermillion sparrow, horseman, swallow’s wings, side flyer, great master, side monkey, vertical mover, flying ox, vertical pup, vertical horse, dragon horse, dragon king, horned falcon, soaring eagle, roaring dog and lion dog.
Hook moves (changing tack)
The hook mover, long-nosed goblin, Capricorn, and peacock can move any number of squares along a straight line, as a normal ranging piece, but may also abruptly change tack left or right by 90° at any one place along the route, and then continue as a ranging piece. Turning a corner like this is optional.
The range covered by a hook move is the equivalent of two moves by a rook, or two moves by a bishop, depending on the piece. However, a hook move is functionally a single move: The piece cannot capture twice in one move, nor may it capture and then move on. It must stop before an intervening piece (unless it first changes direction to avoid it), and must stop when it captures, just like any other ranging piece. It can only change direction once per move.
Area movers
The lion and lion hawk may take multiple (2) steps in a single turn. These do not have to be in a line, so these pieces can potentially reach every square within two or three steps of the starting square, not just squares along one of the diagonals or orthogonals. Such moves are also useful to get around obstructions. An area mover must stop where it captures.
Limited range jumping pieces
The golden bird and several promoted pieces have the option of jumping a limited number of squares, and then continuing on in the same direction as a ranging piece.
Range jumping (flying) pieces
The ancient dragon may jump over any number of pieces, friend or foe, along a straight line, but only when making a capture. Otherwise it moves as a ranging piece.
Range capturing pieces
The great general, vice general, rook general, bishop general, violent dragon and flying crocodile may jump over any number of pieces, friend or foe, along a diagonal or orthogonal. They capture all pieces they jump.
However, they may only jump pieces of lower rank, whether friend or foe. The relevant ranking is:
- King, crown prince
- Great general
- Vice general
- Rook general, bishop general, violent dragon, flying crocodile
Individual pieces
King, fragrant elephant and white elephant- Limited range: The king, fragrant elephant and white elephant can move one or two squares in any direction, orthogonal or diagonal.
- The king may move into check (not recommended).
- The elephants have the same promotion.
Crown prince, left general and right general
- Step: The crown prince left general and right general can step one square in any direction, orthogonal or diagonal.
- A crown prince may move into check (not recommended).
- The pieces have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Gold general and violent wolf
- Step: The gold general and violent wolf can step one square in the four orthogonal directions or diagonally forward, giving them six possibilities.
- They cannot move diagonally backward.
- The pieces have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Rear standard
- Limited range: The rear standard can move one or two squares diagonally.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally
Free king
- Ranging: The free king can move any number of free squares in a straight line in any direction, orthogonal or diagonal.
Free dream-eater
- Ranging: The free dream-eater can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
- Limited range: It can move one to five squares orthogonally sideways.
Wooden dove
- Limited range: The wooden dove can move one or two (or three?) squares in the four orthogonal directions.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions, but has the option of jumping in these directions instead of ranging.
- Jump plus limited range: It can jump to the third square in the four diagonal directions, and then (optionally) move one or two squares in the same direction.
- Note: in Japanese Wikipedia, the diagram shows the orthogonal limited range as being limited to two squares, but the verbal description gives a range of three.
Earth dragon
- Step: The earth dragon can move one square orthogonally forward or diagonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares in the four diagonal directions.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally backward.
The Japanese Wikipedia describes another set of movements for this piece.
- Step: The earth dragon can move one square orthogonally backward or diagonally forward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally backward.
Free demon
- Limited range: The free demon can move one to five squares orthogonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions or orthogonally right.
The Japanese Wikipedia describes another set of movements for this piece.
- Limited range: The free demon can move one to five squares orthogonally forward or backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions or orthogonally sideways.
Running horse
- Step: The running horse can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally or diagonally forward.
- Jump: It can jump to the second square diagonally backwards
Beast cadet
- Limited range: The beast cadet can move one or two squares orthogonally forward, sideways or in the four diagonal directions.
Long-nosed goblin (tengu)
- Hook move: The long-nosed goblin can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions, then (optionally) turn 90° and move any number of free squares in a perpendicular direction.
Unlike in other shogi variants, in taikyoku the tengu cannot move orthogonally, and therefore can only reach half of the squares on the board. This is the move of the capricorn, and may be an error.
Mountain eagle (right)
- Limited range: The right mountain eagle can move one or two squares diagonally backward to the left.
- Jump: It can jump to the second square along either right diagonal.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally right, diagonally forward to the left, or in the four orthogonal directions.
Mountain eagle (left)
- Limited range: The left mountain eagle can move one or two squares diagonally backward to the right.
- Jump: It can jump to the second square along either left diagonal.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally left, diagonally forward to the right, or in the four orthogonal directions.
Fire demon
- Limited range: The fire demon can move one or two squares orthogonally forward or backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways or in the four diagonal directions.
It cannot burn other pieces as in tenjiku shogi
Tenjiku shogi
Tenjiku shogi is a large-board variant of shogi . The game dates back to the 15th or 16th century and was based on the earlier chu shogi, which itself was based on dai shogi.- Objective :The objective of the game is to capture the opponent's king and, if present, the crown prince, which counts as...
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Whale
- Ranging: The whale can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward; or diagonally backward.
Running Rabbit
- Step: The running rabbit can move one square orthogonally or diagonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally or diagonally forward.
White tiger
- Ranging: The white tiger can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways, or diagonally forward to the left.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally forward or backward.
Turtle-snake
- Ranging: The turtle-snake can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward to the right or backward to the left.
- Step: It can move one square in any of the remaining directions.
Ceramic dove
- Limited range: The ceramic dove can move one or two squares in the four orthogonal directions.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions
Lance, oxcart and savage tiger
- Ranging: The lance, oxcart and savage tiger can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Reverse Chariot
- Ranging: The reverse chariot can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Mountain dove
- Step: The mountain dove can move one square orthogonally backward or sideways.
- Limited range: It can move one to five squares diagonally forward.
Flying swallow
- Step: The flying swallow can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward.
Captive officer
- Limited range: The captive officer can move one or two squares orthogonally forward or sideways; or
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares in the four diagonal directions
Rain dragon
- Step: The rain dragon can move one square orthogonally or diagonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways or backward; or diagonally backward.
Forest demon
- Limited range: The forest demon can move one to three squares orthogonally forward or sideways.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally backward or diagonally forward.
Mountain stag
- Step: The mountain stag can move one square orthogonally forward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares diagonally forward.
- Limited range: It can move one to four squares orthogonally backward.
Running pup and running serpent
- Step: The running pup and running serpent can move one square orthogonally sideways.
- Ranging: They can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Side serpent
- Step: The side serpent can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares orthogonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways.
Great dove
- Limited range: The great dove can move one to three squares in the four orthogonal directions.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions.
Running tiger and running bear
- Limited range: The running tiger and running bear can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Ranging: They can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Yaksha
- Step: The yaksha can move one square orthogonally backward or diagonally forward.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares orthogonally sideways.
Buddhist devil
- Limited range: The Buddhist devil can move one to three squares diagonally forward.
- Step: It can move one square orthogonally sideways or backward.
Guardian of the Gods
- Limited range: The guardian of the Gods can move one to three squares in the four orthogonal directions.
Wrestler
- Limited range: The wrestler can move one to three squares in the four diagonal directions.
Silver general and violent stag
- Step: The silver general and violent stag can move one square in the four diagonal directions; or
- One square orthogonally forward, giving them five possibilities.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Drunken elephant and neighboring king
- Step: The drunken elephant and neighboring king can move one square in any direction, orthogonal or diagonal, except orthogonally backward.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Gold chariot
- Step: The gold chariot can move one square in the four diagonal directions.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Side dragon
- Ranging: The side dragon can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or sideways.
Running stag
- Limited range: The running stag can move one or two squares orthogonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways or diagonally forward.
Running wolf
- Step: The running wolf can move one square orthogonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways or diagonally forward.
Bishop general
- Range capture: The bishop general can fly over any number of squares along a straight line in any diagonal direction, so long as they don't contain a royal (king or crown prince) or another range capturing piece. All pieces it flies over are removed from the game.
Rook general
- Range capture: The rook general can fly over any number of squares along a straight line in any orthogonal direction, so long as they don't contain a royal (king or crown prince) or another range capturing piece. All pieces it flies over are removed from the game.
Right tiger
- Step: The right tiger can move one square diagonally right.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally left or diagonally left.
Left tiger
- Step: The left tiger can move one square diagonally left.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally right or diagonally right.
Right dragon
- Limited range: The right dragon can move one or two squares orthogonally right.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally left or diagonally left.
Left dragon
- Limited range: The left dragon can move one or two squares orthogonally left.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally right or diagonally right.
Beast officer
- Limited range: The beast officer can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares orthogonally forward or in the four diagonal directions.
Wind dragon
- Step: The wind dragon can move one square diagonally backward to the left.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways, diagonally forward or diagonally backward to the right.
Free pup
- Step: The free pup can move one square diagonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward; or diagonally forward.
Rushing bird
- Step: The rushing bird can move one square orthogonally sideways or in the four diagonal directions.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally forward.
Old kite (hawk)
- Limited range: The old kite can move one or two squares in the four diagonal directions; or
- Step: It can move one square orthogonally sideways.
Peacock
- Hook move: The peacock can move any number of free squares in a straight line along one of the two forward diagonals, then (optionally) turn 90° and move any number of free squares in a straight line in a perpendicular diagonal direction.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares in one of the two rearward diagonals.
Water dragon
- Limited range: The water dragon can move one or two squares diagonally forward.
- Limited range: It can move one to four squares diagonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four orthogonal directions.
Fire dragon
- Limited range: The fire dragon can move one or two squares diagonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one to four squares diagonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four orthogonal directions.
Copper general
- Step: The copper general can move one square orthogonally forward or backward; or
- diagonally forward.
Phoenix master
- Limited range: The phoenix master can move one to three squares orthogonally sideways.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally or orthogonally forward or backward.
- Jump: It can jump to the third square diagonally forward.
Kirin master
- Limited range: The Kirin master can move one to three squares orthogonally sideways.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally or orthogonally forward or backward.
- Jump: It can jump to the third square orthogonally forward or backward.
Silver chariot
- Step: The silver chariot can move one square diagonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares diagonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Vertical bear
- Step: The vertical bear can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Knight
- Jump: A knight jumps at an angle intermediate between orthogonal and diagonal, amounting to one square forward plus one square diagonally forward, in a single motion. That is, it has a choice of two forward destinations.
- The knight ignores intervening pieces on the way to its destination, though its destination square must of course be either empty, or occupied by an opponent's piece (in which case the opponent's piece is captured), just as with any other moving piece.
Pig general
- Limited range: The pig general can move one or two squares orthogonally backward; or
- Limited range: It can move one to four squares diagonally forward.
Chicken general and pup general
- Step: The chicken general and pup general can move one square diagonally backward.
- Limited range: They can move one to four squares orthogonally forward.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Horse general and ox general
- Step: The horse general and ox general can move one square orthogonally backward or diagonally forward.
- Limited range: They can move one to three squares orthogonally forward.
- These pieces and their promotions have the same range of motion.
Center standard and front standard
- Limited range: The center standard and front standard can move one to three squares in the four diagonal directions.
- Ranging: They can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four orthogonal directions.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above). Uniquely, when a center standard promotes to a front standard, it gains no new abilities.
Side boar
- Step: The side boar can move one square orthogonally forward or backward; or in the four diagonal directions.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways.
Silver rabbit
- Limited range: The silver rabbit can move one or two squares diagonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally backward.
Golden deer
- Ranging: The golden deer can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares diagonally backward.
Lion
- Area move/double capture: The lion can step one square in any direction up to twice in a turn. It can change directions after its first step, and is not restricted to following one of the eight orthogonal or diagonal directions. That is, it can also step to one of the in-between squares that a knight jumps to in Western chess.
- Unlike the hook movers, it can continue after a capture on the first step, potentially capturing two pieces on each turn.
- By moving back to its starting square, it can effectively capture a piece on an adjacent square without moving. This is called 居喰い igui "stationary feeding".
- A similar move without capturing leaves the board unchanged, which is a way to pass a turn. This can be done even when there are no empty adjacent squares.
- Or,
- Jump: The lion can jump anywhere within two squares. This is equivalent to jumping in any of the eight diagonal or orthogonal directions, or making any of the jumps of a knight in Western chess.
- Note: The restrictions when capturing a lion in chu shogiChu shogiChū shōgi is a board game native to Japan. It is similar to modern shogi in its rules and game play. Its name means "mid-sized shogi", from a time when there were three sizes of shogi variants in regular use. Chu shogi seems to have been developed in the early 14th century as a derivative of dai...
do not apply in taikyoku shogi.
Captive cadet
- Limited range: The captive cadet can move one to three squares orthogonally forward or sideways, or in the four diagonal directions.
Great stag
- Limited range: The great stag can move one or two squares diagonally backward.
- Jump: It can jump to the second square diagonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four orthogonal directions.
Violent dragon
- Limited range: The violent dragon can move one or two squares in the four orthogonal directions.
- Range capture: It can fly over any number of pieces along one of the four diagonal directions, as long as they don't include a royal (king or prince) or another range-jumping piece. All pieces it flies over are removed from the game.
Woodland demon
- Limited range: The woodland demon can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways or backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward, or diagonally forward.
Vice general
- Jump: The vice general can jump to the second square in the four orthogonal directions. This is a standard jump.
- Range capture: It can fly over any number of squares along one of the four diagonal directions, as long as they don't contain a royal (king or prince), great general, or another vice general. All pieces it flies over are removed from the game.
Great general
- Range capture: The great general can fly over any number of squares along a straight line in any direction, orthogonally or diagonally, as long as they don't contain a royal (king or prince) or another great general. All pieces it flies over are removed from the game.
Stone chariot
- Step: The stone chariot can move one square diagonally forward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Ranging: It can move any number of squares orthogonally forward or backward.
Cloud eagle
- Step: The cloud eagle can move one square orthogonally sideways.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares diagonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Bishop
- Ranging: A bishop can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions.
Because it cannot move orthogonally, a bishop can only reach half the squares on the board.
Rook, soldier, running chariot and square mover
- Ranging: The rook, soldier, running chariot and square mover can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four orthogonal directions.
- They have the same range of motion but promote differently (see above).
Side wolf
- Step: The side wolf can move one square diagonally forward to the left or diagonally backward to the right.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways.
Flying cat
- Step: The flying cat can move one square orthogonally backward or diagonally backward.
- Jump: It can jump to the third square orthogonally forward or sideways, or diagonally forward.
Mountain falcon
- Limited range: The mountain falcon can move one or two squares diagonally backward.
- Jump: It can jump to the second square orthogonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four orthogonal directions or diagonally forward.
- Note: This is the depiction of the diagram in Japanese wiki. However, the text makes no mention of an ability to move orthogonally sideways.
Vertical tiger
- Limited range: The vertical tiger can move one or two squares orthogonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Little standard
- Step: The little standard can move one square diagonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares diagonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four orthogonal directions.
Cloud dragon
- Step: The cloud dragon can move one square orthogonally forward or sideways.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally backward or in the four diagonal directions.
Copper chariot
- Limited range: The copper chariot can move one to three squares diagonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Ram’s-head soldier
- Ranging: The ram’s-head soldier can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward.
- Step: It can move one square orthogonally backward.
Violent ox
- Step: The violent ox can move one square orthogonally forward or backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward.
Great dragon
- Limited range: The great dragon can move one to three squares orthogonally forward or backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions.
Golden bird
- Limited range: The golden bird can move one to three squares orthogonally sideways or diagonally backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
- Jump and range: It can jump up to three pieces diagonally forward, and then optionally continue any number of free squares in that direction.
Dark spirit
- Step: The dark spirit can move one square in any direction orthogonally or diagonally, except diagonally forward to the left.
Deva
- Step: The Deva can move one square in any direction orthogonally or diagonally, except diagonally forward to the right.
Wood chariot
- Step: The wood chariot can move one square diagonally forward to the left or diagonally backward to the right.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
White horse
- Ranging: The white horse can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward.
Howling dog (left and right)
- Step: The howling dog can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
- The left and right howling dogs have the same range of motion but promote differently (see above).
Side mover
- Ranging: The side mover can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways.
- Step: It can move one square orthogonally forward or backward.
Prancing stag
- Limited range: The prancing stag can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Step: It can move one square orthogonally forward, backward or diagonally forward.
Water buffalo
- Ranging: The water buffalo can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally forward or backward.
Ferocious leopard
- Step: The ferocious leopard can move one square in the four diagonal directions; or
- orthogonally forward or backward.
Fierce eagle
- Limited range: The fierce eagle can move one or two squares in the four diagonal directions.
- Step: It can move one square orthogonally forward or sideways.
Flying dragon
- Jump: The flying dragon can jump to the second square in the four diagonal directions.
- Because it cannot move orthogonally or to every diagonal square, a flying dragon can only reach one quarter the squares on the board.
Poisonous snake
- Step: The poisonous snake can move one square orthogonally backward or diagonally forward.
- Limited range: It can moves one or two squares orthogonally forward or sideways.
Flying goose
- Step: The flying goose can move one square orthogonally forward or backward; or
- diagonally forward.
Strutting crow
- Step: The strutting crow can move one square orthogonally forward or diagonally backward.
Blind dog and Chinese cock
- Step: The blind dog and Chinese cock can move one square orthogonally backward or sideways.
- Step: They can move one square diagonally forward.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Water general and mountain general
- Step: The water general and mountain general can move one square orthogonally forward or backward.
- Limited range: They can move one to three squares diagonally forward.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Fire general
- Step: The fire general can move one square diagonally forward.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares orthogonally forward or backward.
Phoenix
- Step: The phoenix can move one square in the four orthogonal directions.
- Jump: It can jump to the second square in the four diagonal directions.
Kirin
- Step: A Kirin can move one square orthogonally forward or backward, or in the four diagonal directions.
- Jump: It can jump to the second square orthogonally sideways.
Hook mover
- Hook move: The hook mover can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four orthogonal directions, then (optionally) turn 90° and move any number of free squares in a perpendicular direction.
Little turtle
- Limited range: The little turtle can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Jump: It can jump to the second square orthogonally forward or backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward, or in the four diagonal directions.
Great turtle
- Limited range: The great turtle can move one to three squares orthogonally sideways.
- Jump: It can jump to the third square orthogonally forward or backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward, or in the four diagonal directions.
Capricorn
- Hook move: The Capricorn can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions, then (optionally) turn 90° and move any number of free squares in a perpendicular direction.
- Because the capricorn cannot move orthogonally, it can only reach half of the squares on the board. This is the move of the capricorn, and may be an error.
Tile chariot
- Step: The tile chariot can move one square diagonally forward to the right or diagonally backward to the left.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Vertical wolf
- Step: The vertical wolf can move one square orthogonally sideways.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares orthogonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Side ox
- Step: The side ox can move one square diagonally forward to the right or diagonally backward to the left.
- Ranging: It can move any number of squares orthogonally sideways.
Donkey and enchanted badger
- Limited range: The donkey and enchanted badger can move one or two squares in the four orthogonal directions.
- Their range of movement and promotions are the same.
Flying horse
- Limited range: The flying horse can move one or two squares in the four diagonal directions.
Angry boar
- Step: The angry boar can move one square orthogonally forward or sideways; or
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares diagonally forward.
Violent bear
- Limited range: The violent bear can move one or two squares diagonally forward.
- Step: It can move one square orthogonally sideways.
- Step: One version of the game has the violent bear moving one square orthogonally forward; another version has it moving one square diagonally backward.
Evil Wolf
- Step: The evil wolf can move one square orthogonally sideways or forward; or diagonally forward.
Liberated horse
- Step: The liberated horse can move one square diagonally forward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Flying cock
- Step: The flying cock can move one square orthogonally sideways or diagonally forward.
Old monkey
- Step: The old monkey can move one square in the four diagonal directions or orthogonally backward.
Northern barbarian and southern barbarian
- Limited range: The northern barbarian and southern barbarian can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Step: They can move one square orthogonally forward or backward or diagonally forward.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Eastern barbarian and western barbarian
- Limited range: The eastern barbarian and western barbarian can move one or two squares orthogonally forward or backward.
- Step: They can move one square orthogonally sideways or diagonally forward.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Treacherous fox
- Ranging: The treacherous fox can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward, or in the four diagonal directions.
- Jump: One version of the game allows it to jump to the second or third square in those directions then move, another does not.
Center master
- Limited range: The center master can move one to three squares orthogonally sideways or diagonally backward.
- Jump: It can jump to the second square and then move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward, or diagonally forward.
- It need not jump before moving nor move after jumping.
Roc master
- Limited range: The roc master can move one to five squares orthogonally sideways or diagonally backward.
- Jump/ Ranging: It can jump to the third square and then move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
- It need not jump before moving nor move after jumping.
Earth chariot
- Step: The earth chariot can move one square orthogonally sideways.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Vermilion sparrow
- Step: The vermilion sparrow can move one square in the four orthogonal directions, or diagonally forward to the right or diagonally backward to the left.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward to the left or diagonally backward to the right.
Blue dragon
- Ranging: The blue dragon can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward, or diagonally forward to the right.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
Horseman
- Limited range: The horseman can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward, or diagonally forward.
Swooping owl and old rat
- Step: The swooping owl and old rat can move one square orthogonally forward or diagonally backward.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Climbing monkey
- Step: The climbing monkey can move one square orthogonally forward or backward; or diagonally forward.
Cat sword
- Step: The cat sword can move one square in the four diagonal directions.
Because it cannot move orthogonally, a cat sword can only reach half the squares on the board.
Swallow’s wings
- Step: The Swallow’s wings can move one square orthogonally forward or backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways.
Blind monkey
- Step: The blind monkey can move one square in the four diagonal directions or orthogonally sideways.
Blind tiger
- Step: The blind tiger can move one square in any direction, orthogonal or diagonal, except orthogonally forward.
Side flyer
- Step: The side flyer can move one square in the four diagonal directions; or
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways.
Blind bear
- Step: The blind bear can move one square in the four diagonal directions or orthogonally sideways.
Coiled serpent
- Step: The coiled serpent can move one square orthogonally forward or backward; or diagonally backward.
Reclining dragon
- Step: The reclining dragon can move one square in the four orthogonal directions.
Free eagle
- Jump/ranging: The free eagle can jump to the second or third square, and then move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four orthogonal directions or diagonally backward.
- Jump/ranging: It can jump to the second to fourth square, and then move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward.
- It need not jump before moving nor move after jumping.
Lion hawk
- Area move/double capture/ranging: The lion hawk can move as a lion or as a bishop.
- Jump/ranging: It can leap to the second square in any diagonal direction before making a bishop move in that same direction.
Chariot soldier
- Limited range: The chariot soldier can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward, orthogonally backward or in the four diagonal directions.
Side soldier
- Step: The side soldier can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways.
Vertical soldier
- Step: The vertical soldier can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Wind general and river general
- Step: The wind general and river general can move one square orthogonally backward or diagonally forward.
- Limited range: They can move one to three squares orthogonally forward.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Horse soldier and ox soldier
- Step: The horse soldier and ox soldier can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: They can move one to three squares orthogonally sideways.
- Ranging: They can move any number of free squares in a straight line forward, orthogonally or diagonally.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Wood general
- Limited range: The wood general can move one or two squares diagonally forward.
Earth general and go between
- Step: The earth general and go between can move one square orthogonally forward or backward.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Boar soldier, leopard soldier and bear soldier
- Step: The boar soldier, leopard soldier and bear soldier can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: They can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Ranging: They can move any number of free squares in a straight line forward, orthogonally or diagonally.
Stone general
- Step: The stone general can move one square diagonally forward.
Because it cannot move orthogonally or backward, a stone general can only reach less than half the squares on the board.
Tile general and sword soldier
- Step: The tile general and sword soldier can move one square diagonally forward or orthogonally backward.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Iron general and dog
- Step: The iron general and dog can move one square forward, orthogonally or diagonally.
- They have the same range of movement but promote differently (see above).
Great standard
- Limited range: The great standard can move one to three squares diagonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward or in the four orthogonal directions.
Great master
- Limited range: The great master can move one to five squares orthogonally sideways or diagonally backward.
- Jump: It can jump to the third square forward, orthogonally or diagonally.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line forward, orthogonally or diagonally, or orthogonally backward.
Right chariot
- Ranging: The right chariot can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward to the right.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally backward to the left.
- Step: It can move one square orthogonally right.
Left chariot
- Ranging: The left chariot can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward to the left.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally backward to the right.
- Step: It can move one square orthogonally left.
Side monkey
- Step: The side monkey can move one square diagonally forward or orthogonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways.
Vertical mover
- Ranging: The vertical mover can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
- Step: It can move one square orthogonally sideways.
Flying Ox
- Ranging: The flying ox can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions.
- It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Longbow soldier
- Step: The longbow soldier can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Limited range: It can move one, two or three squares diagonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Vertical pup
- Step: The vertical pup can move one square backward, orthogonally or diagonally.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Vertical horse
- Step: The vertical horse can move one square diagonally forward or orthogonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Burning soldier
- Step: The burning soldier can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares orthogonally sideways.
- Limited range: It can move one to five squares diagonally forward.
- Limited range: It can move one to seven squares orthogonally forward.
Dragon horse
- Ranging: A dragon horse can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions.
- Step: It can move one square in the four orthogonal directions.
Dragon king
- Ranging: A dragon king can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four orthogonal directions.
- Step: It can move one square in the four diagonal directions.
Horned falcon
- Ranging: The horned falcon can move as a free king.
- Jump: It can jump to the second square orthogonally forward.
Soaring eagle
- Jump: The soaring eagle can jump to the second square diagonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in any direction, orthogonally or diagonally.
Spear soldier
- Step: The spear soldier can move one square orthogonally backward or sideways.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Vertical leopard
- Step: The vertical leopard can move one square orthogonally backward, sideways or diagonally forward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Cross-bow soldier
- Step: The cross-bow soldier can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares orthogonally sideways or diagonally forward.
- Limited range: It can move one to five squares orthogonally forward.
Roaring dog
- Limited range: The roaring dog can move one to three squares diagonally backward.
- Jump: It can jump to the third square diagonally forward or in the four orthogonal directions.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward or in the four orthogonal directions.
Lion dog
- Jump: The lion dog can jump to the third square in any direction, orthogonally or diagonally.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in any direction, orthogonally or diagonally.
Pawn
- Step: The pawn can move one square orthogonally forward.
Promotion
Like other large board shogi variants, this game uses the promotion-by-capture rule. When a piece first makes a capture, it promotes. (If it can: a few important pieces do not promote.) Promotion has the effect of changing how a piece moves. See the table above for what each piece promotes to. Promotion is effected by turning the piece over after it moves, revealing the name of its promoted rank. Promotion is both compulsory and permanent.This is all very different from smaller shogi variants, where pieces promote when they cross a promotion zone (the enemy camp), and where promotion is optional. The dots on the taikyoku shogi board that would represent promotion zones in other games are only there as placement guides for the initial setup of the two camps.
Some pieces promote, or demote, to a piece that exists in the initial setup of the board. However, such a piece cannot then promote a second time as its namesake does. For example, a bishop promotes to a dragon horse. However, while a ferocious leopard promotes to a bishop on its first capturing move, it does not promote to a dragon horse on its second. Rather, it remains a bishop for the rest of the game.
If a Lance, oxcart, savage tiger, side dragon, running wolf, knight, angry boar, evil wolf, flying cock, wood general, stone general, iron general, dog, pawn, running leopard, free wolf or raiding falcon reaches the furthest rank; it must remain there until it captures or is captured.
Individual promoted pieces
New pieces that only appear as a result of promotion are as follows:Free bird
- Limited range: The free bird can move one to three squares diagonally backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four orthogonal directions.
- Jump and range: It can jump up to three pieces diagonally forward, and then optionally continue any number of free squares in that direction.
Great dream-eater
- Jump: The great dream-eater can jump to the third square orthogonally sideways.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in any direction, orthogonally or diagonally.
Ancient dragon
- Range: The ancient dragon can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions.
- Ranging jump: It can jump over any number of squares orthogonally forward or backward.
Heavenly Tetrarch king
- Range: The Heavenly Tetrarch king can move any number of free squares in a straight line in any direction, orthogonally or diagonally.
- Jump: It can jump to the second square before (optionally) moving on in that direction.
- It can capture a piece on an adjacent square without moving (igui).
Great falcon
- Range: The great falcon can move any number of squares in any direction, orthogonally or diagonally.
- Jump: It can jump to the second square orthogonally forward before (optionally) moving on in that direction.
Great elephant
- Limited range: The great elephant can move one to three squares diagonally forward.
- Jump and range: It can jump up to three pieces in a straight line diagonally backward or in one of the four orthogonal directions, and then optionally continue any number of free squares in that direction.
Fire ox and violent wind
- Step: The fire ox and violent wind can move one square orthogonally sideways.
- Range: They can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally backward, forward or in the four diagonal directions.
Strong bear
- Limited range: The strong bear can move one or two squares orthogonally backward.
- Ranging: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward, sideways or in the four diagonal directions.
Right phoenix
- Limited range: The right phoenix can move one to five squares orthogonally sideways.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions.
Running leopard
- Range: The running leopard can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward, sideways or diagonally forward.
Thunder runner
- Limited range: The thunder runner can move one to four squares orthogonally sideways or backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line forward, orthogonally or diagonally.
Rain demon
- Limited range: The rain demon can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways or diagonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares orthogonally forward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally backward.
- Range jump: It can jump any number of squares along either forward diagonal.
Free boar
- Step: The free boar can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward, sideways or diagonally forward.
Free dog
- Limited range: The free dog can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways or diagonally backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward, backward or diagonally forward.
Running ox
- Limited range: The running ox can move one or two squares diagonally backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward, sideways or diagonally forward.
Great horse
- Limited range/range: The great horse moves as a horseman.
Cavalier and strong chariot
- Range: The cavalier and strong chariot can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward or in the four orthogonal directions.
Free fire
- Limited range: The free fire can move one to five squares orthogonally forward or backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways or in the four diagonal directions.
Burning chariot
- Step: The burning chariot can move one square orthogonally sideways.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward, backward or diagonally forward.
Free stag and strong eagle
- Range: The free stag and strong eagle move as a free king.
Free dragon and free tiger
- Range: The free dragon and free tiger can move any number of free squares in a straight line in any direction, orthogonal or diagonal, except orthogonally forward.
Flying crocodile
- Limited range: The flying crocodile can move one or two squares diagonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares diagonally forward.
- Range capture: It can jump any number of pieces in one of the four orthogonal directions, as long as these do not include a royal (king or crown prince) or another range-capturing piece. Any piece it jumps over is removed from the board.
Divine tiger
- Limited range: The divine tiger can move one or two squares orthogonally backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward, sideways, or diagonally forward to the left.
Divine dragon
- Limited range: The divine dragon can move one or two squares orthogonally left.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward, right, backward or diagonally forward to the right.
Divine turtle
- Step: The divine turtle can move one square diagonally forward to the left or in the four orthogonal directions.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line along either rear diagonal, or diagonally forward to the right.
Divine sparrow
- Step: The divine sparrow can move one square diagonally forward to the left or in the four orthogonal directions.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally backward or forward to the left.
Free serpent and coiled dragon
- Range: The free serpent and coiled dragon can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward, backward, or diagonally backward.
Free wolf
- Range: The free wolf can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward, sideways or diagonally forward.
Great tiger
- Step: The great tiger can move one square orthogonally forward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways or backward.
Right dog
- Step: The right dog can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or diagonally backward to the left.
Left dog
- Step: The left dog can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or diagonally backward to the right.
Free bear, free leopard and great whale
- Range: The free bear, free leopard and great whale move as a flying ox.
Running boar
- Step/range: The running boar moves as an earth chariot or vertical mover.
Heavenly horse
- Jump: The heavenly horse jumps at an angle intermediate between orthogonal and diagonal, amounting to one square forward plus one square diagonally forward, in a single motion; or one square backward plus one square diagonally backward, in a single motion.
- It ignores intervening pieces while jumping to its destination, though its destination square must of course be either empty, or occupied by an opponent's piece (in which case the opponent's piece is captured), just as with any other moving piece.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Spear general
- Limited range: The spear general can move one or two squares orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one, two or three squares orthogonally sideways.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Great leopard
- Step: The great leopard can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares diagonally forward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Flying stag and copper elephant
- Step: The flying stag and copper elephant can move one square orthogonally sideways or in the four diagonal directions.
- Range: They can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Right army
- Step: The right army can move one square orthogonally forward, backward, left or diagonally left.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line right, orthogonally or diagonally.
Left army
- Step: The left army can move one square orthogonally forward, backward, right or diagonally right.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line left, orthogonally or diagonally.
Beast bird and captive bird
- Limited range: The beast bird and captive bird can move one or two squares orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: They can move one to three squares orthogonally sideways.
- Range: They can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or in the four diagonal directions.
Gliding swallow
- Range: The gliding swallow moves as a rook.
Buddhist spirit
- Area move/double capture: The Buddhist spirit can move as a lion, or
- Range: It can move as a free king.
Teaching king
- Jump and range: The teaching king can jump up to three pieces along a straight line in any diagonal or orthogonal direction, and then optionally continue any number of free squares in that direction.
Great shark
- Limited range: The shark can move one or two squares diagonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one to five squares diagonally forward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four orthogonal directions.
Furious fiend
- Area move/double capture or jump: The furious fiend can move as a lion; or
- Limited range: It can move three squares in any direction, orthogonal or diagonal. (A normal move: it can only capture once and cannot jump when doing this.)
Leopard king
- Limited range: The leopard king can move one to five squares in any direction, orthogonal or diagonal.
Goose wing
- Step: The goose wing can move one square in the four diagonal directions.
- Limited range: It can move one, two or three squares orthogonally sideways.
- Range: It can move any number of squares orthogonally forward or backward.
Left iron chariot
- Step: The left iron chariot can move one square in the four orthogonal directions.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally backward to the right.
Right iron chariot
- Step: The right iron chariot can move one square in the four orthogonal directions.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally backward to the left.
Plodding ox
- Step: The plodding ox can move one square in the four diagonal directions.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Wind snapping turtle
- Limited range: The wind snapping turtle can move one or two squares diagonally forward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Running tile
- Limited range/range: The running tile moves as a running tiger or running bear.
Young bird
- Limited range: The young bird can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways or diagonally backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Playful cockatoo
- Limited range: The playful cockatoo can move one or two squares diagonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares diagonally forward.
- Limited range: It can move one to five squares orthogonally sideways.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Walking heron
- Limited range: The walking heron can move one or two squares orthogonally sideways or diagonally forward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward or backward.
Tiger soldier
- The tiger soldier can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one or two squares orthogonally forward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line diagonally forward.
Running dragon
- Limited range: The running dragon can move one to five squares orthogonally backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward, sideways or in the four diagonal directions.
Heavenly Tetrarch
- Limited range: The Heavenly Tetrarch can move one to four squares in any direction, orthogonal or diagonal.
Elephant king
- Limited range/range: The elephant king moves as a ceramic dove.
Peaceful mountain
- Limited range: The peaceful mountain can move one to five squares orthogonally forward or sideways.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line in the four diagonal directions.
Chinese river
- Step: The Chinese river can move one square orthogonally forward or backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways or in the four diagonal directions.
Free chicken
- Limited range/range: The free chicken moves as a woodland demon.
Free ox, free horse and free pig
- Step/limited range/range: The free ox, free horse and free pig move as a free pup.
Longbow general
- Limited range: The longbow general can move one to five squares orthogonally sideways.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward, backward or diagonally forward.
Burning general
- Limited range: The burning general can move one or two squares orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares orthogonally sideways.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line forward, orthogonally or diagonally.
Cross-bow general
- Limited range: The cross-bow general can move one or two squares orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares orthogonally sideways.
- Limited range: It can move one to five squares diagonally forward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Mountain crane
- Range: The mountain crane can move as a free king.
- Jump: It can jump to the third square and (optionally) continue in that direction.
Rushing boar
- Step: The rushing boar can move one square orthogonally forward, sideways or in the four diagonal directions.
Sword general
- Step: The sword general can move one square orthogonally backward.
- Limited range: It can move one to three squares forward, orthogonally or diagonally.
Bird of paradise and multi general
- Range: The bird of paradise and multi general move as a white horse.
Bear’s eyes and venomous wolf
- Step: The bear’s eyes and venomous wolf move as a crown prince.
Mountain witch
- Range: The mountain witch can move any number of free squares in a straight line backward, orthogonally or diagonally.
- When it reaches the first rank, it must stay there until captured.
Flying falcon
- Step: The flying falcon can move one square orthogonally forward.
- Range: It can move any number of squares in the four diagonal directions.
Spirit turtle
- Jump: The spirit turtle can jump to the third square in the four orthogonal directions.
- Range: It can move as a free king.
Treasure turtle
- Jump: The treasure turtle can jump to the second square in the four orthogonal directions.
- Range: It can move as a free king.
Great bear
- Step: The great bear can move one square orthogonally sideways or backward.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line forward, orthogonally or diagonally.
Wizard stork
- Range: The wizard stork can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally sideways, backward or diagonally forward.
Raiding falcon
- Step: The raiding falcon can move one square diagonally forward.
- Step: The raiding falcon can move one square orthogonally sideways.
- Range: It can move any number of free squares in a straight line orthogonally forward.
Great eagle
- Range: The great eagle can move as a free king.
- Jump: It can jump to the second square in any direction, orthogonally or diagonally, and (optionally) continue moving in that direction.
Check and mate
When a player makes a move such that the opponent's sole remaining king or crown prince could be captured on the following move, the move is said to give check to the king or crown prince; the king or crown prince is said to be in check. If a player's last king or crown prince is in check and no legal move by that player will get the king or crown prince out of check, the checking move is also mateCheckmate
Checkmate is a situation in chess in which one player's king is threatened with capture and there is no way to meet that threat. Or, simply put, the king is under direct attack and cannot avoid being captured...
, and effectively wins the game.
Unlike Western chess, a player need not move out of check, and indeed may even move into check. Although obviously not often a good idea, a player with more than one royal (king or crown prince) may occasionally sacrifice one of these pieces as part of a gambit
Gambit
A gambit is a chess opening in which a player, most often White, sacrifices material, usually a pawn, with the hope of achieving a resulting advantageous position. Some well-known examples are the King's Gambit , Queen's Gambit , and Evans Gambit...
.
A player is not allowed to give perpetual check
Perpetual check
In the game of chess, perpetual check is a situation in which one player can force a draw by an unending series of checks. Such a situation typically arises when the player who is checking cannot deliver checkmate; while failing to continue the series of checks gives the opponent at least a chance...
to the sole objective piece.
Game end
A player who captures the opponent's sole remaining king or crown prince wins the game. In practice this rarely happens; as a player will resign when checkmated, as otherwise when loss is inevitable.A player who makes an illegal move loses immediately. (This rule may be relaxed in casual games.)
Another possible, if rather uncommon, way for a game to end is repetition (sennichite). If the same position occurs four times with the same player to play, then the game is no contest
No contest (boxing)
No contest is a technical term used in some combat sports to describe a fight that ends for reasons outside the fighters' hands.-Boxing:...
. Recall, however, the prohibition against perpetual check.
Game notation
The method used in English-language texts to express shogi moves was established by George Hodges in 1976. It is derived from the algebraic notation used for chessAlgebraic chess notation
Algebraic notation is a method for recording and describing the moves in a game of chess. It is now standard among all chess organizations and most books, magazines, and newspapers...
, but differs in several respects. Modifications have been made for taikyoku shogi.
A typical example is P-12h.
The first letter represents the piece moved (see above).
Promoted pieces have a + added in front of the letter. (e.g., +CC for a wizard stork (promoted Chinese cock). The designation of the piece is followed by a symbol indicating the type of move: - for an ordinary move or x for a capture. Next is the designation for the square on which the piece lands. This consists of a number representing the file and a lowercase letter representing the rank, with 1a being the top right corner (as seen from Black's point of view) and 36jj being the bottom left corner. (This method of designating squares is based on Japanese convention, which, however, uses Japanese numerals
Japanese numerals
The system of Japanese numerals is the system of number names used in the Japanese language. The Japanese numerals in writing are entirely based on the Chinese numerals and the grouping of large numbers follow the Chinese tradition of grouping by 10,000...
instead of letters. For example, the square 2c is denoted by 2三 in Japanese.)
If a lion, golden bird, heavenly tetrarch king or teaching king captures by 'igui’, the square of the piece being captured is used instead of the destination square, and this is preceded by the symbol !. If a double capture is made, than it is added after the first capture.
If a move forces the player to promote the piece, then a + is added to the end to signify that the promotion was taken. For example, ORx7c+ indicates an old rat capturing on 7c and promoting.
In cases where the above notation would be ambiguous, the designation of the start square is added after the designation for the piece in order to make clear which piece is meant.
Moves are commonly numbered as in chess.
See also
- Shogi variantShogi variantMany variants of shogi have been developed over the centuries, ranging from some of the largest chess-type games ever played to some of the smallest...
- Wa shogiWa shogiWa shogi is a large board variant of shogi in which all of the pieces are named for animals. It is played either with or without drops.- Game equipment :...
- Chu ShogiChu shogiChū shōgi is a board game native to Japan. It is similar to modern shogi in its rules and game play. Its name means "mid-sized shogi", from a time when there were three sizes of shogi variants in regular use. Chu shogi seems to have been developed in the early 14th century as a derivative of dai...
- Heian dai shogiHeian dai shogiHeian dai shogi large chess') is an early large board variant of shogi as it was played in the Heian period. The same 12th century document which describes the Heian form of shogi also describes this variant...
- Dai shogiDai shogiDai shōgi is a board game native to Japan. It is similar to standard shogi in its rules and game play. Dai shogi is only one of several large board shogi variants. Its name means large shogi, from a time when there were three sizes of shogi games...
- Tenjiku shogiTenjiku shogiTenjiku shogi is a large-board variant of shogi . The game dates back to the 15th or 16th century and was based on the earlier chu shogi, which itself was based on dai shogi.- Objective :The objective of the game is to capture the opponent's king and, if present, the crown prince, which counts as...
- Dai dai shogiDai dai shogiDaidai shōgi is a large board variant of shogi . The game dates back to the 15th century and is based on the earlier Dai shogi. Apart from its size, the major difference is in the range of the pieces and the “promotion by capture” rule. It is the smallest board variant to use this rule.-...
- Maka dai dai shogiMaka dai dai shogiMaka daidai shōgi is a large board variant of shogi . The game dates back to the 15th century and is based on dai dai shogi and the earlier dai shogi. The three Edo-era sources are not congruent in their descriptions of the pieces not found in smaller games...
- Tai ShogiTai shogiTai shogi is a large-board variant of shogi . The game dates to the 15th century and is based on earlier largeboard shogi games...
External links
- Shogi Net
- History.chess.free/taikyoku shogi
- Chessvariants.org/taikyoku
- taikyokushogi.hp.infoseek.co.jp/taikyoku An online flash version of the game with illustrated piece movements. No AI.
- taikyoku.swf Download the game here (right-click, save link as)
- The previous two links are dead these days, but the .swf file can still be downloaded here ...taikyoku.swf (You need to actually go to the page. Right-click, save link won't work with this link)