Month: December 2025

  • Shogi Vocabulary 101: Simple Words You’ll Hear a Lot (with Pronunciation)

    So you’ve learned the pieces (or you’re working on it), and now you’re watching a shogi video or playing an app… and suddenly people are saying things like “sente,” “gote,” “oute,” and “tsumi.”

    Don’t worry—shogi has its own little “starter dictionary,” and once you know a handful of terms, everything starts making way more sense.

    This post is a friendly guide to simple shogi-related vocabulary for English speakers: what the words mean, how to say them, and when you’ll hear them. (more…)

  • Reading Shogi Pieces: What the Kanji Means (and How to Say It)

    If you’re new to shogi (Japanese chess), the pieces can feel like little mystery wedges covered in symbols. Those symbols are kanji—Chinese characters used in Japanese writing—and each one tells you what the piece is.

    The good news: you don’t have to “know Japanese” to get comfortable with them. In this post, I’ll show you the most common kanji you’ll see on shogi pieces, what they mean, and how to pronounce the piece names out loud. (more…)

  • Japanese Organizations That Shape Shogi

    A Shogi Map: 5 Japanese Organizations That Shape the Game

    If you’ve been watching shogi online or learning the rules at home, you’ve probably wondered: “Who runs all this?” In Japan, shogi is not only a game. It’s a whole culture, with leagues, events, teachers, and big community networks.

    Below are five major shogi organizations (and one big network) that you’ll see again and again when you explore Japanese shogi life. I’m not ranking them. This is just a helpful “map.”

    Heads up: these sites are mostly Japanese. Your browser’s translate button can do a lot.

    Quick “Japanese site survival” tips

    • Look for dates like 2025/12/16 or 2025年12月16日. That’s usually what’s new.
    • Words you’ll see everywhere: 棋戦 (tournament), 対局 (game), 棋士 (pro), 女流 (women’s pro), 大会 (event), 支部 (branch).
    • Don’t overthink it. Even with rough translation, you can usually spot: who is playing, where, and when.

    (more…)

  • Five Modern Shogi Variants People Actually Play (and Why You Should Try Them)

    I love standard shogi: the 9×9 board, the quiet tension, and the “wait… you can drop THAT?!” moments.

    But sometimes I want something faster. Or something I can teach in minutes. Or a shogi‑flavored game that works with kids and friends who don’t know the pieces.

    Japan has a whole world of “casual shogi” (カジュアル将棋) and shogi-inspired games. I dug up these five modern variants that show up again and again as popular, selling well, or widely played shogi variants. (more…)

  • Five Japanese-Only Shogi Sites English Fans Are Missing

    If you only follow shogi in English, you’re seeing the game through a small window. English shogi websites are awesome, but most of the “main stage” is still in Japan. That means a lot of the biggest shogi pages are Japanese-only. They aren’t fully copied into English, and they don’t have a real English twin.

    Here are five Japanese shogi sites that Japanese fans use all the time—and that English shogi sites can’t really replace. I’ll also show you what to click, even if your Japanese is close to zero.


    A simple way to use Japanese shogi sites (even if you can’t read much)

    This is my routine:

    1. Open the page and turn on browser translate.
    2. Ignore the paragraphs and hunt for the menu words. (棋譜, 中継, ブログ, etc.)
    3. Let the board do the talking. Even if you don’t understand the commentary, you can still follow the moves and the tension.

    Now let’s jump in. (more…)

  • Middle Shogi (Chū Shōgi) rules for beginners

    I’ve added a new Middle (Chu) Shogi game to the site.

    https://japanesechess.org/chushogi2026/

     

    Rules

    Middle Shogi is the common English name for 中将棋(ちゅうしょうぎ / Chū Shōgi). It is an older, bigger shogi game played on a 12×12 board with 46 pieces per player (92 total) and 21 kinds of pieces.

    This guide explains one common modern rule set described in Japanese sources (including special Lion rules and “no piece drops”).
    Note: Some groups and computer programs use different promotion timing rules, so always agree on rules before you start. (more…)