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  2. Right King - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right_King

    In shogi, Right King or Right-hand King (右玉 migi gyoku) is a defensive subcomponent of different openings in which the king stays on the right side of the board together with the rook, which protects the back rank (rank 9) as well as the eighth file. It is an exception to the general rule that the king is castled away from the rook.

  3. Kentarō Ishii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kentarō_Ishii

    He became interested in shogi after receiving a shogi set as a present from his grandfather, and started attending a shogi school run by shogi professional Kazuharu Shoshi as a kindergartener. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Ishii failed the entrance examination for the Japan Shogi Association 's apprentice school twice before finally passing it and being accepted ...

  4. Kyoto shogi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyoto_shogi

    The promotion rules and values are reminiscent of microshogi and entirely different from standard shogi: A king cannot promote: K; A tokin (T) promotes to a lance and vice versa: T ↔ L; A silver general promotes to a bishop and vice versa: S ↔ B; A gold general promotes to a knight and vice versa: G ↔ N; A pawn promotes to a rook and vice ...

  5. Shogi tactics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shogi_tactics

    In shogi, only lances, rooks (or dragons), and bishops (or horses) can pin an opponent's piece. In the adjacent example, the Black's pawn at 37 is pinned by White's bishop because if the pawn were to advance to 36 then Black's rook would be captured by the bishop.

  6. Bishop Exchange - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bishop_Exchange

    This strategy flouts the general shogi maxim that the king and rook should be far apart by having the king next to the rook. Here, the rook is used as a defense piece protecting the bottom rank. The left silver may be used for offense. [7] Right King is more commonly played by White but uncommon for Black in the regular Bishop Exchange opening.

  7. Kazuo Sugimoto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazuo_Sugimoto

    Sugimoto was born in Ōta, Tokyo on September 1, 1991. [1] He learned how to play shogi from watching his father (an amateur 2-dan) play. [2] As a sixth-grade student at Tamagawa Elementary School in 2003, Sugimoto won the 28th Elementary School Student Meijin Tournament [], defeating fellow future professional Takuya Ishida in the semi-finals.

  8. Snowroof - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowroof

    In shogi, Snowroof or Snow Roof Fortress (雁木 gangi, lit. 'goose-wooden') is a Static Rook opening that characteristically uses a Snowroof castle. It is named after the covered sidewalks (雁木造) connected to buildings in Niigata Prefecture .

  9. Toshiaki Kubo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toshiaki_Kubo

    The center was managed by shogi professional Hitoshige Awaji who became Kubo's shogi teacher after the two played a 19-piece "Naked King" handicap game. In 1986, he advanced to the semi-finals of the 11th Elementary Student Meijin Tournament [ ja ] as fifth-grade elementary school student , but lost to the eventual tournament winner and fellow ...