Shogi variant
Shogi variants |
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Standard shogi (9×9, drops) |
Small variants |
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Standard-size variants |
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Large variants |
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Multiplayer variants |
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3D variants |
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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. A few of these variants are still regularly played, though none are nearly as popular as shogi itself.
The drop rule, often considered the most notable feature of shogi, is absent from most shogi variants, which therefore play more like other forms of chess, with the board becoming less crowded as pieces are exchanged.
Predecessors of modern shogi
Some form of chess had almost certainly reached Japan by the 9th century, if not earlier, but the earliest surviving Japanese description of the rules of chess dates from the early 12th century, during the Heian period. Unfortunately, this description does not give enough information to play the game, but this has not stopped people from trying to reconstruct this early form of shogi, which is usually referred to as Heian shogi (平安将棋). Piece movements were as in modern shogi, but there was no rook or bishop. The board appears to have been 9×8 or 8×8. The setup is unknown, but can reasonably be assumed to have been the same as in modern shogi (minus the rook and bishop, and minus a gold general in the 8×8 case), but possibly the pawns started on the second rank rather than the third. It can safely be assumed that the game was played without drops.
By the 16th century the game had taken a form closer to the modern game: it was played on a 9×9 board with the same setup as in modern shogi except that an extra piece (a drunken elephant) stood in front of the king. This form of the game is known as sho shogi (小将棋), which means "little shogi". (While 9×9 may not seem 'little', it was smaller than the other shogi variants prevalent at the time.) The drunken elephant was eliminated by the Emperor Go-Nara (reign 1526-1557), and it is assumed that the drop rule was introduced at about the same time, giving rise to shogi as we know it today.
Large-board variants
There are a number of shogi variants played on boards larger than 9×9. These variants are all quite old, and were probably all played without drops. Michael C. Vanier says, "It is thought that the really huge games (dai-dai and up) were never really played to any significant extent [...] and were devised merely so that the creators could have the fun of inventing enormous games, amazing their friends and confounding their enemies. However, the games up to Tenjiku shogi at least appear to be quite playable, assuming one has the time."[1]
The same 12th-century document which describes the Heian form of shogi also describes a variant played on a 13×13 board, which is now called Heian dai shogi (平安大将棋). As with the smaller Heian shogi, the rules for this game have not been completely preserved.
The most popular large-board variant is chu shogi (中将棋), played on a 12×12 board. The name means middle shogi, and the game is sometimes so called in English. Chu shogi has existed since at least the 14th century; there are earlier references, but it is not clear that they refer to the game as we now know it. Chu shogi is best known for a very powerful piece called the lion, which moves like a king but twice per turn. The game was still commonly played in Japan in the early 20th century, but has now largely died out. It has, however, gained some adherents in the West. The main reference work in English is the Middle Shogi Manual by George Hodges.
Other large medieval shogi variants were wa shogi (11×11, possibly played with drops), dai shogi (大将棋, "great shogi", 15×15), tenjiku shogi (天竺将棋, literally "Indian shogi", but probably meant in the sense of "exotic shogi", 16×16), dai-dai shōgi (大大将棋, "great great shogi", 17×17), maka dai-dai shōgi (摩訶大大将棋, "ultra great great shogi", 19×19) and tai shogi (泰将棋, "grand shogi", 25×25). These variants date back at least to the 17th century. Tai shogi was thought to be the world's largest chess variant, but recently records of an even larger variant, taikyoku shogi (大局将棋, "ultimate shogi", 36×36), was discovered. However, there is no evidence that any of them were commonly played apart from wa shogi and dai shogi. Furthermore, the sources for the rules of the larger variants tend to disagree with each other on many particular issues, such that only wa shogi, chu shogi, dai shogi, and tenjiku shogi can be said to have one single canonical set of rules (and some lacunae in the latter two need to be reconstructed analogously to chu shogi).
The most recent large board variant is kō shōgi (廣将棋 or 廣象棋 "wide (elephant) chess", 19×19), which is played on a go board and incorporates elements of Chinese chess. Ko shogi is unusual for the interdependence of its pieces and the complex rules of promotion.
Of the historical large-board variants, only wa (11×11), chu (12×12), tenjiku (16×16), and maka dai-dai shogi (19×19) have gained a limited following today. There is a society for chu shogi in Japan, as well as some efforts to revive maka dai-dai, though both efforts have changed the rules slightly from the historical ones. Tenjiku shogi gained some Western following around the turn of the millennium, but due to a misinterpretation of the rules it was then abandoned as being an immediate win for the first player. This is not the case under the corrected rules.
Modern variants
These are some of the new and old shogi variants which have been invented. Time will show which if any of the many recently invented variants stand the test of usage and competition from other games, and stay in use.
Small variants
Name | Board size | Pieces each | When invented | Invented by | Notes |
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Bushi shogi[2] | 1×2 | 1 | 2000? | Georg Dunkel | The pieces are cubes, and move only by being rotated and set another face up. |
Gufuu shogi[3] | 2×3 | 2 | 2000? | Georg Dunkel | The players have a king each, and two shared pieces. |
Nana shogi[4] | 3×3 | 3 | 1998/2001 | Georg Dunkel | The pieces are cubes, and each piece's power and moves varies according to which of its four sides is up. There are two minor variations to piece movement rules. |
9 grid shogi[5] | 3×3 | various | 2016 | Teruichi Aono | Uses 40 different piece combinations and start positions. The first and last rank are the promotion zones. All other rules are the same as the traditional shogi. Designed to teach shogi. Its name in Japanese is 9マス将棋 kyū-masu shōgi. |
Dōbutsu shōgi | 3×4 | 4 | recently | Madoka Kitao | Children's game. [6] Also sold as "Let's Catch the Lion!" |
Shogi4 | 4×4 | 5 | 2013 | Oca Studios | Shogi designed for children, released under public domain; print and play version available[7] |
Micro shogi | 4×5 | 5 | modern, before 1982 | Ōyama Yasuharu? | Pieces alternate between promoted and demoted state after each capturing move. |
Minishogi | 5×5 | 6 | c. 1970 | Shigenobu Kusumoto | He may have rediscovered it instead of inventing it. Comparatively popular. |
Goro goro shogi | 5×6 | 8 | Each player's promotion zone consists of the two farthest ranks from the player. There are also no long-range pieces such as rooks and bishops, although there is a variant where each player has a knight and a lance.[8] | ||
Kyoto shogi | 5×5 | 5 | c. 1976 | Tamiya Katsuya | |
Judkins shogi | 6×6 | 7 | before April 1998 | Paul Judkins of Norwich, England | |
Whale shogi | 6×6 | 12 | 1981 | R. Wayne Schmittberger of USA | All pieces named after cetaceans. |
Tori shogi | 7×7 | 16 | late 18th century | Toyota Genryu | All pieces named after birds. Uses the drop rule. One of the more popular shogi variants. |
Yari shogi | 7×9 | 14 | 1981 | Christian Freeling, Netherlands | |
EuroShogi | 8×8 | 16 | 2000+ | Vladimír Pribylinec | Pieces are two colored cubes with chess symbols. A rotation of the man promotes the unit or changes its colour. |
Heian shogi | 8×8 or 9×8 | 16 or 18 | c. 1120 or before; Heian period | An early form of shogi. |
Standard-size variants
Name | Board Size | Pieces each | When invented | Invented by | Notes |
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Sho shogi | 9×9 | 21 | Kamakura period | Ancestor of modern shogi. | |
Cannon shogi | 9×9 | 20 | February 1998 | Peter Michaelsen | Shogi plus xiangqi-type cannons. |
Hasami shogi | 9×9 | 9 or 18 | Like ludus latrunculorum. Not much like shogi. | ||
Hand shogi | 9×9 | 19 pieces | early 1997 | John William Brown, Lewisville, Arizona | Starts with 10 pieces each side in hand. |
Annan shogi | 9×9 | 20 | A Korean variation of standard shogi where pieces gain the powers of the pieces behind them. Popular in Japan. | ||
Unashogi | 9×9 | 20 | 1994 | Edward Jackman | Starts with all pieces in hand. |
Masonic shogi | 9×9 | 20 | 1987 | George R. Dekle, Sr. | Ranks indented like brickwork, adapted moves; otherwise like shogi. |
Hexshogi | 85 cells | 20 | 1986 | George R. Dekle, Sr. | Hexagonal cells, adapted moves; otherwise like shogi. |
Trishogi | 9×10 | 20 | 1987 | George R. Dekle, Sr. | Triangular cells, adapted moves; otherwise same as shogi. |
Large variants
Name | Board size | Pieces each | Piece types | Different moves | When invented | First mentioned | Invented by | Notes |
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Okisaki shogi | 10×10 | 22 | 9 | 11 | c. 1996 | c. 1996 | Masayuki Nakayachi | |
Wa shogi | 11×11 | 27 | 17 | 22 | 17th century; Edo period | 1694 Shōgi Zushiki | All pieces are named after animals. Occasionally played. | |
Chu shogi | 12×12 | 46 | 21 | 28 | early 14th century?; Muromachi period | 1350 Yūgaku ōrai | Smaller version of dai shogi with fewer pieces (eliminating the least powerful ones) and different start setup. The most popular of the large variants. | |
Heian dai shogi | 13×13 | 34 | 13 | 14 | Heian period | 1230 Nichūreki | ||
Nutty shogi | 13×13 | 50 | 25 | 38 | 2015 | 2015 | H. G. Muller | Smaller version of tenjiku shogi with fewer pieces and different start setup[9] |
Cashew shogi | 13×13 | 54 | 35 | 37 | 2015 | 2015 | H. G. Muller | Smaller version of dai-dai shogi with fewer pieces and different start setup[10] |
Macadamia shogi | 13×13 | 48 | 26 | 37 | 2015 | 2015 | H. G. Muller | Smaller version of maka-dai-dai shogi with fewer pieces and different start setup[11] |
Dai shogi | 15×15 | 65 | 29 | 36 | c. 1230; Kamakura period | 1300 Futsū Shōdōshū | ||
Tenjiku shogi | 16×16 | 76 | 36 | 43 | 15th or 16th century; Muromachi period | 1694 Shōgi Zushiki | Enlarged version of chu shogi with more pieces (adding even more powerful ones) and different start setup. One of the relatively more popular large variants. | |
Dai-dai shōgi | 17×17 | 96 | 64 | 68 | 15th century; Muromachi period | 1443 Shōgi Rokushu no Zushiki | ||
Maka-dai-dai shōgi | 19×19 | 96 | 50 | 76 | 15th century; Muromachi period | 1443 Shōgi Rokushu no Zushiki | Occasionally played, though with altered rules. | |
Kō shōgi | 19×19 | 90 | 34 | 53 | late 17th century; Edo period | 1694 Shōgi Zushiki | Ogyū Sorai (attributed) | Based partly on xiangqi and projectile weapons. |
Hishigata shogi | 19×19 | 39 | c. 2005 | c. 2005 | Sean Humby | Maka-dai-dai shogi with fewer pieces and different start setup[12] | ||
Tai shogi | 25×25 | 177 | 93 | 101 | 15th century; Muromachi period | 1443 Shōgi Rokushu no Zushiki | ||
Taikyoku shogi | 36×36 | 402 | 208 | 300 | Edo period | 1694 Shōgi Zushiki |
Multiplayer variants
Name | Board size | Pieces each | When invented | Invented by | Notes |
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Sannin shogi | 7×7×7 hexagonal | 18 | c. 1930 | Tanigasaki Jisuke | for three players |
Yonin shogi | 9×9 | 9 | 1993 | Ota Mitsuyasu | for four players |
Three-dimensional variants
Name | Board size | Pieces each | When invented | Invented by | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Space Shogi | 9×9×9 | 20 | 1987 | George R. Dekle, Sr. | Orthodox shogi in a 3D gamespace |
References
External links
- International Chu Shogi Ladder
- Richard's Play-By-EMail Server - supports many shogi variants and chess variants.
- Shogi variants
- Steve Evans' ShogiVar - freeware for playing many Shogi variants (no longer works on 64-bit computers, but H.G. Muller's Linux port of this program does)
- WinBoard Shogi Variants - freeware for playing some Shogi variants on modern PCs by H. G. Muller
- The large Shogi variants: Chess on a huge scale (by H. G. Muller)