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Shogi

#2065BGG ↗

1587 · 2-2 players · 60min · weight 3.80 · 2,090 ratings

v2 v3

BGG raw

ID
2065
Name
Shogi
Year
1587
Rank
1184
Min players
2
Max players
2
Playing time
60
Min playtime
60
Max playtime
60
Avg weight
3.7977
Num weights
173
Bayes avg
6.31427
Average
7.37706
Users rated
2090
Num owned
3599
Wanting
55
Wishing
583
Num comments
667
Fetched at
Sat Apr 25 2026 16:16:52 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)
Mechanisms (3)
Grid MovementPattern MovementSquare Grid
Categories (1)
Abstract Strategy
Description (1419 chars)

Of Japanese origins, Shogi is played on a 9 by 9 board, and the object is to capture the opponent's king. There are two main differences with Western chess. First, not only pawns but almost every piece can promote if it reaches the opponents three last rows. Second and most distinctive characteristic is that captured pieces become property of the capturing player and during his turn he can "parachute" or "drop" them back to the board instead of performing a normal move. Because of this feature, similar to Bughouse, the game can last longer than a Chess game, the board generally stays fairly crowded and there is no simplification going into the endgame. However, the endgame is typically more rapid with many possibilities for attack and ways to achieve a checkmate, which also makes draws/ties very rare. According to "A World of Chess" by Jean-Louis Cazaux & Rick Knowlton (2017, ISBN 978-0-7864-9427-9), Bishop, Rook and Drunk Elephant were introduced to the 9x9 Shogi creating Sho Shogi, the immediate predecessor of Shogi, in the middle of the 15th century. Modern Shogi where created with the introduction of the drop rule and the removal of the Drunk Elephant piece in Sho Shogi. This happened between 1567 and 1587 (earliest recording of modern Shogi). The latter date is based upon a picture in the diary of the samurai Matsudaira Ietada, dated 1587, which shows a game identical to the one of today.

LLM v2 (wide)

Not yet enriched at v2 (wide pass).

LLM v3 (deep)

Not yet enriched at v3 (deep pass).