A Conversation for Shogi (Japanese Chess)

interesting

Post 1

adder

as a normal chess-player, that sounds very fascinating

how do you know whose pieces are whose though? - they can't be coloured because if you take your opponents piece then when you put it on then board it will be the wrong colour


interesting

Post 2

AgentPnakotus

Greetings smiley - smiley

Players tell which pieces are whose by which way they point. The pieces are wedge-shaped, and wider at the bottom than at the top, so they appear to "point" to the opposite side of the board. Pieces that are pointing away from you are yours'; pieces pointing towards you are your opponent's.


interesting

Post 3

adder

hi (sorry)

thanks for explaning that. in a course of a game, do most pieces get put back straight on the board after they are taken or are there lots of situations where it's beneficial not to


interesting

Post 4

AgentPnakotus

It depends on the strategy you play with, and the strategy your playing against. A common exchange early in the game is the Bishops since their on the same diagonal directly opposite eachother. Some people will put the bishop directly back into play. Personally I like to keep ahold of it in case a fork situation comes up later. With the limited mobility of knight is often better to keep hold of them for forks later.


interesting

Post 5

adder

sorry if it seems constant stream of questions - this has got me intrigued

this reminds of a variant of chess called bughouse, where the pieces you take you can put on for yourself - but in chess for this you have to have two sets because of the colours.

If you capture a promoted piece, do you put it on in its promoted form or in its original form?


interesting

Post 6

AgentPnakotus

The piece looses it's promoted status when captured, and when returned to the board does so in it's unpromoted state.


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