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  2. Shogi notation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shogi_notation

    Shogi notation is the set of various abbreviatory notational systems used to describe the piece movements of a shogi game record or the positions of pieces on a shogi board. A record of an abstract strategy board game such as shogi is called kifu ( 棋譜 ) in Japanese.

  3. Template:Shogi diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Shogi_diagram

    No description. Template parameters [Edit template data] Parameter Description Type Status horizontal_alignment 1 Sets the horizontal placement of the diagram in the article space Suggested values floatright tright floatleft tleft Example "tright" means diagram will be floated to the right allowing any text to flow to the left Unknown optional title 2 Text displayed at the top of the diagram ...

  4. Sennichite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sennichite

    A surprising repetition draw occurred in the endgame of a game between Akira Watanabe (Black) and Yoshiharu Habu on October 3, 2012. [3] The opening was Third File Rook . After the 121st move (= 61st move in western notation), White (Habu) found himself in a threatmate situation where Black (Watanabe) had a possible 9-move mate sequence of 62.R ...

  5. Shogi tactics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shogi_tactics

    In shogi, only lances, rooks (or dragons), and bishops (or horses) can pin an opponent's piece. In the adjacent example, the Black's pawn at 37 is pinned by White's bishop because if the pawn were to advance to 36 then Black's rook would be captured by the bishop.

  6. Central Rook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Rook

    In shogi, Central Rook (中飛車 nakabisha) is a subclass of Ranging Rook openings in which the rook is positioned on the fifth (central) file.. However, since the central file can be thought of as the dividing line between Ranging Rook and Static Rook positions, it is also possible to find Static Rook positions using a rook that has been moved to the central file.

  7. Castle (shogi) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castle_(shogi)

    In shogi, castles (Japanese: 囲い, Hepburn: kakoi, lit.: "enclosure") are strong defensive configurations of pieces that protect the king (Japanese: 玉).. While the English shogi term "castle" seems to be borrowed from the special castling move in western chess, shogi castles are structures that require making multiple individual moves with more than one piece.

  8. Shogi opening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shogi_opening

    A shogi opening (戦法 senpō) is the sequence of initial moves of a shogi game before the middle game. The more general Japanese term for the beginning of the game is joban ( 序盤 ) . A jōseki ( 定跡 ) is the especially recommended sequence of moves for a given opening that was considered balanced play at one point in time for both sides ...

  9. Dōbutsu shōgi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dōbutsu_shōgi

    Perpetual check (4 move repetition) is also a draw as in dōbutsu shōgi. A 9×9 version of this game known as "Dobutsu shogi in the Greenwood" (in Japanese: おおきな森のどうぶつしょうぎ ōkina mori no dōbutsu shōgi, lit. Animal Shogi in big forest), which is identical to shogi, has been launched. The game features new pieces ...