This page is written by the game's inventor, Jan Paerke.
Kozeriai
a 5x7
variant of Shogi, invented by Jan Paerke
- Kozeriai
means "skirmish" in japanese and that is also the name of this variant of
Shogi.
- It is
a fast game, every decision and move immediately requires an answer from the
enemy.
- To
play Kozeriai you first have to know how to play
Shogi,
if you don´t there are
excellent articles presented here at the chessvariant pages.
- Kozeriai
is played on a smaller board and with fewer pieces than in Shogi, but important
features from the original game are intact:
- All
types off pieces from the original game are represented.
- The
position of pieces in the beginning of the game follow the pattern of that in
the original game.
- All
rules of Shogi are followed except for those stipulated below.
- The
game is played on a 5x7 shogi board. The 5-cell sides are turned to each
player.
- The
game begins with a deploy phase. Both player picks the following amount of
pieces from the original Shogi game: One
king (Gjoku),
one gold (Kin),
one silver (Gin),
one knight (Kei),
one lance (Kjoo),
one rook (Hi),
one bishop (Kaku) and
five pawns (Fu).
- Each
player then place the pieces on the board (one by one, alternating) according
to following restrictions: On the row nearest one player the pieces king, gold,
silver, knight and lance are freely distributed. On the second row the player
choose freely where to put the rook and the bishop. The third row is filled up
with the five pawns.
- The
player who started to deploy pieces then starts the actual game by moving a
piece according to the normal Shogi rules.
- The
promotion zone in Kozeriai begins like in Shogi on the enemy pawn row and
continues to the row nearest the enemy: In Kozeriai that means the fifth, sixth
and seventh row seen from the player.
- The
size of the board makes the game convenient for introductory games and/or to
play when the time is limited. The size also reminds of when mating problems
are presented in Shogi literature.
- There
would be no surprise for me if this variant (or some very similar) already have
been described somewhere else. If so: please let me know. Anyhow, this variant
was ivented in March 2004 when I was introducing Shogi to my colleague Joakim
Wigforss.