Kyoto shogi
Kyoto shogi is a modern variant of shogi. It was invented by Tamiya Katsuya c. 1976.
Kyoto shogi is played like standard shogi, but with a reduced number of pieces on a 5×5 board. However, the pieces alternately promote and demote with every move, and the promotion values are entirely different from standard shogi.
Rules of the game
Game equipment
Two players play on a board ruled into a grid of 5 ranks by 5 files. The squares are undifferentiated by marking or color.Each player has a set of 5 wedge-shaped pieces, of slightly different sizes. From largest to smallest they are:
- 1 king
- 1 gold general
- 1 silver general
- 1 tokin
- 1 pawn
Setup
Each side places his pieces in the positions shown below, pointing toward the opponent.- In the rank nearest the player:
- * The king is placed in the center file.
- * The gold general is placed in the adjacent files to the right of the king.
- * The silver general is placed in the adjacent files to the left of the king.
- * The tokin is placed in the left corner.
- * The pawn is placed in the right corner.
Promotion
There is no promotion zone in Kyoto shogi. Every time a piece makes a move it alternately promotes and reverts to its unpromoted state. Promotion is effected by turning the piece over after it moves, revealing the name of its promoted rank; demotion is effected by turning the piece back.The promotion rules and values are reminiscent of microshogi and entirely different from standard shogi:
- A king cannot promote: K
- A tokin 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 versa: P ↔ '''R'''