Dai Shogi
Dai Shogi is a precursor of Chu Shogi. The latter was the most popular form of Chess in Japan for many centuries. Compared to Chu Shogi, Dai Shogi has 16 extra pieces of 8 types, which all promote to Gold General. It also lacks the refined rules against Lion trading.
The extra pieces are rather weak, and promote to the also weak Gold General. As a result of this, and due to the longer time it takes the many steppers to cross the larger board, Dai Shogi is a much slower game than Chu. It is thus not surprising the latter quickly surpassed Dai Shogi in popularity.
Setup
|
Click on piece name for move diagram! First rank
Fourth rank
Fifth and sixth rank
|
|
Second rank
|
Third rank
|
Pieces
Most Shogi pieces can be described as orthodox Queens with range limits in some or all of the eight directions. The possible ranges in this variant are infinite (i.e. no limit), 2, 1 (just a step, like king) or 0 (meaning it doesn't move in that direction at all), and different directions (even those related by symmetry) can have different range. The mnemonic representation reveals how such pieces moves; basically the shape of the piece is its move diagram: an 'inner' square represents the King moves (range 1), and 'bites' taken out of it indicate the directions in which it cannot move at all. Longer ranges are indicated by an outward 'bulge'. A radial line drawn on the piece in that direction then indicates infinite range, and no markings at all range 2. |
Mnemonic piece symbol |
Lion
The Lion is a double mover: it can make upto 2 King steps per turn, changing direction between them, even when this returns them to their starting square. They can make the first step as jump, when it choose to do so. So it can:
- Jump directly to any square in the 5x5 area surrounding it,
- Annihilate any opponent standing next to it, without moving (formally one step, and then a step back),
- Annihilate any opponent standing next to it, moving on to an empty square next to that ('hit and run'),
- Annihilate any opponent standing next to it, and normally capture an opponent standing next to that ('double capture'),
- Stay in place without capturing anything if one of the neighboring squares is empty (effectively passing a turn)
Soaring Eagle, Horned Falcon
Eagle and Falcon move as Queen, except that in some directions they do not slide, but have a 'stinging' move, which can:
- Move to the first or jump to the second square,
- Jump to the second square, annihilating an opponent on the first square,
- Annihilate an opponent on the first square without moving (formally one step, and then a step back),
- When the first square is empty, move there and step back (effectively passing the turn).
Crown Prince
The Elephant promotes to Crown Prince, which is just another name for King. So you can have two royals in Dai Shogi. This counts as extinction royalty, i.e. when you have two royals, one of them can be captured without ill effects, and only when your last royal is captured you lose the game.
Knight and Pawn
The Knight and Pawn occur in the Shogi version, the Knight having only is two forward-most moves, and the Pawn both moving and capturing straight ahead.
Rules
Goal
The game is won by eliminating the opponent's royal piece(s). Royal are King and 'Prince', the latter being a second King obtainable through promotion. There is no rule against venturing into or leaving yourself in check, although this would of course be unwise. This makes stalemate non-existent in real games, and if there ever has been a rule for it, it is no longer known. For definiteness we can assume that stalemate is a win.
Promotion
Like in most Shogi variants, it is not just the Pawns that can promote, but almost all pieces. There is no choice for what to promote to: each piece type has a pre-determined promoted form (written on the back of the tile used to represent the piece, so that it can be flipped to perform the promotion). They often promote to a piece that was already present in the initial setup. But in that case it cannot promote again, even if the latter does: every piece promotes at most once. So a Rook obtained by promoting a Gold is really a different Rook from the one present initially, as the latter can still promote, and is thus much more valuable.
Pieces can promote when they enter the promotion zone formed by the furthest five board ranks. This is optional; you can always defer promotion, and in some cases that makes sense, because not all promoted pieces are strictly upward compatible with their unpromoted forms. In addition, moves that start inside the promotion zone can lead to promotion when they capture something.
Pieces promote as follows (moves only indicated for pieces not occurring in the initial setup):
|
One army with all pieces promoted |
Repetitions
The historic sources mention that repetition is forbidden, but do not elaborate on which side carries the burden to avoid it. It is likely that you could not win by perpetually checking your opponent, and that the burden to deviate was thus upon the checker, like in all Asian variants. The modern interpretation of this rule is that evading a perpetual chase, with moves that do not attack anythinging should also be always allowed, so that the chaser must deviate, and that repeats reached without either side attacking anything should be draws.
Notes
'Dai' means 'large', and 'chu' means middle, so Dai Shogi must obviously be older than Chu Shogi, or the latter would not have been called 'middle'. It seems that Chu Shogi was derived from Dai Shogi as an attempt to speed up the game by removing the slowest pieces that also had weak promotions.
It is intriguing that the eliminated pieces all promote to Tokin, while in Chu Shogi all pieces promote differently, and the Tokin only appears as promoted Pawn. This makes one wonder if there is not a form of 'back contamination' here. Like that originally in Dai Shogi all the generals promoted to Gold (as Silver and Knight do in Sho Shogi), and that after elimination of the weakest pieces to produce Chu Shogi, Copper, Silver, Gold and Leopard were still considered too insignificant, and were assigned new promotions to pieces in the initial setup that could not yet be promoted to. And that these promotions then later trickled back into Dai Shogi, when people got accustomed to them. This is pure speculation, however.
This 'user submitted' page is a collaboration between the posting user and the Chess Variant Pages. Registered contributors to the Chess Variant Pages have the ability to post their own works, subject to review and editing by the Chess Variant Pages Editorial Staff.
Author: H. G. Muller.
Web page created: 2015-04-20. Web page last updated: 2015-04-20