Shogi was a popular tactical game favored by the more scholarly citizens of Rokugan.
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| - Lo Shogi, meglio conosciuto come Scacchi Giapponesi è il primo tentativo dei giapponesi di affacciarsi nel prospero mercato del tarocco, di cui i loro cugini cinesi hanno da sempre il monopolio assoluto.
- Shogi was a popular tactical game favored by the more scholarly citizens of Rokugan.
- Shogi - japońska gra podobna do szachów. Podstawową różnicą między szachami jest to, że można posługiwać się zbitymi figurami przeciwnika. W shogi można zagrać na Kurniku (tam szogi).
- Shogi(将棋shōgi, generals' chess), pronounced /ˈʃoʊɡiː/ (rhymes with yogi) in English, also known as Japanese chess, is a two-player board game in the same family as Western chess, chaturanga, Chinese Xiangqi, and is the most popular of a family of chess variants native to Japan. Shōgi means general's (shō 将) boardgame (gi 棋). In early years, however, shogi was written 象棋 (the same as Xiangqi, "elephant chess").
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| - A shogi game being played with a magnetic traveling set. Captured pieces in the tray can be dropped on the board by the capturing player.
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random chance
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| - Lo Shogi, meglio conosciuto come Scacchi Giapponesi è il primo tentativo dei giapponesi di affacciarsi nel prospero mercato del tarocco, di cui i loro cugini cinesi hanno da sempre il monopolio assoluto.
- Shogi was a popular tactical game favored by the more scholarly citizens of Rokugan.
- Shogi - japońska gra podobna do szachów. Podstawową różnicą między szachami jest to, że można posługiwać się zbitymi figurami przeciwnika. W shogi można zagrać na Kurniku (tam szogi).
- Shogi(将棋shōgi, generals' chess), pronounced /ˈʃoʊɡiː/ (rhymes with yogi) in English, also known as Japanese chess, is a two-player board game in the same family as Western chess, chaturanga, Chinese Xiangqi, and is the most popular of a family of chess variants native to Japan. Shōgi means general's (shō 将) boardgame (gi 棋). In early years, however, shogi was written 象棋 (the same as Xiangqi, "elephant chess"). The earliest predecessors of the game, chaturanga, originated in India in the 6th century AD, and spread from China to Japan, where it spawned a number of variants. Shogi in its present form was played as early as the 16th century, while a direct ancestor without the "drop rule" was recorded from 1210 in a historical document Nichūreki, which is an edited copy of Shōchūreki and Kaichūreki from the late Heian period (ca 1120). According to ChessVariants.com, "Perhaps the enduring popularity of Shogi can be attributed to its 'drop rule'; it was the first chess variant wherein captured pieces could be returned to the board to be used as one's own. David Pritchard credits the drop rule to the practice of 16th century mercenaries who switched loyalties when captured—no doubt as an alternative to execution."
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