Query Results for
SELECT * FROM `Item` LEFT JOIN `IndexEntry` USING (ItemID) WHERE FIND_IN_SET(:'ShogiBased',`Categories`) AND `IsHidden` = 0 AND `Item`.`IsDeleted` = 0 AND `Language` = 'English' ORDER BY `AvgRating` DESC, `Item`.`Summary` DESC LIMIT 500 OFFSET 0
- Yo[n]o Shogi. 4-player Shogi variant with all 8 kinds of piece (fewer of some) on a standard Shogi board. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Charles Gilman.
- Yoto. Variant with heavy Xiang Qi influences marks Year of the Ox. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Charles Gilman.
- Yonin Toyang Mitregi. Four-player variant with returns from capture and promotion to Yang Qi pieces. (13x13, Cells: 169) By Charles Gilman.
- Yonin Shogi. 4-handed Shogi variant. (9x9, Cells: 81) Inventor: Ota Mitsuyasu.
- Yonin Seireigi. Four-player variant of Seireigi based on Yonin Shogi. (9x9, Cells: 81) By A. M. DeWitt.
- Yonin Bishogi. Variant based on Yonin Shogi but with FIDE pieces. (11x11, Cells: 121) By Charles Gilman.
- Year of the Pig Variants. Subvariants extending the forward moves in assorted previous variants old and new. By Charles Gilman.
- Yari Shogi. Modern Shogi variant. (7x9, Cells: 63) By Christian Freeling.
- XSChess. Xiangqi plus shogi plus chess. (9x14, Cells: 126) By Hafsteinn Kjartansson.
- Xorix Shogi. Shogi where piece movement are XORed with captured pieces. (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Xorix Shogi. Automated, rule-enforcing preset for playing Xorix Shogi on Game Courier. Inventor: (zzo38) A. Black.
- xodul. Ten different pieces, with some Shogi and Xiangqi inspirations. By Silvia M. G. Rodrigues.
- Whale Shogi. Shogi variant. (6x6, Cells: 36) Inventor: R. Wayne Schmittberger.
- Whale Shogi. Small Shogi variant. Inventor: R. Wayne Schmittberger.
- Wa Shogi pictures. Photos of a commercial Wa Shogi set.
- Wa Shogi. Large Shogi variant from the 17th century or earlier.
- Wa Shogi. Game with many different rather weak pieces, with or without drops. (11x11, Cells: 121)
- Wa Shogi. A variant of Japanese Chess on an 11 by 11 board. (Link.).
- Void Shogi. Modest Shogi variant with more diverse promotions for the minor pieces. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Andrew L Smith.
- Unknown Off-Pieces Shogi. Pieces placed from outside of the board are unknown to opponent. (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Unknown Drop Shogi. It is unknown what kind of piece your opponent dropped. By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Unidirectional arrays on standard boards. Both players in the same direction, as Viking Chess, but on boards of correspondiyng face-to-face variants. By Charles Gilman.
- Unashogi. Parachute all pieces, starting with an empty board. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Edward Jackman.
- U12 Shogi. A new kind of large shogi game. (12x12, Cells: 144) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Typhoon (Revised). Missing description (12x12, Cells: 144) By Adrian King.
- Typhoon (Revised) . Missing description By Adrian King.
- Tori Shogi pictures. Pictures of a commercial Tori Shogi set. Inventor: Ohashi Soei.
- Tori Shogi. A variant of Japanese Chess on a 7 by 7 board. (Link to Roger Hare's shogi site.).
- Tori Shogi. Play this small Japanese Shogi variant on Jocly. Inventor: Ohashi Soei.
- Tori Shogi. Bird Shogi. Inventor: Ohashi Soei.
- Tori Shogi. Tori Shogi, or Bird Shogi. A variant of Japanese Chess on a 7 by 7 board. (7x7, Cells: 49) Inventor: Ohashi Soei.
- Time Travel Chessgi. One can travel backwards or forwards in time, bringing along all one's possessions. By Jeremy Gabriel Good.
- Three Player Hex Shogi 91 . A hexagonal Shogi Variant for three players. By Fergus Duniho.
- Three Player Hex Shogi 91. a hexagonal Shogi variant for three players. (Cells: 91) By Fergus Duniho.
- Tetrahedral Shogi and Tetrahedral Hexgi. Shogi-based 3d variants on an enlargement of the Tetrahedral Chess board. (9x(9x9), Cells: 165) By Charles Gilman.
- Tenjiku Shogi pictures. Photos of a commercial Tenjiku Shogi set.
- Tenjiku Shogi. Fire Demons burn surrounding enemies, Generals capture jumping many pieces. (16x16, Cells: 256)
- Tenjiku Shogi. Play this large historical Shogi variant on Jocly.
- Tenjiku Shogi. Four hundred year old, large, historical variant of Shogi.
- Tengu Dai Shogi. Turbo version of Dai Shogi, with some Dai Dai Shogi pieces.
- Tee Garden Shogi. Not itself a spelling mistake, but inspired by several potential ones. (9x9, Cells: 72) By Charles Gilman.
- Taikyoku Shogi (Unlimited Chess) Playing Pieces. Missing description
- Taikyoku Shogi. Taikyoku Shogi. Extremely large shogi variant. (36x36, Cells: 1296)
- Taikyoku Photographs. Missing description
- Tai Shogi pictures. Photos of a commercially available Tai Shogi set.
- Tai Shogi. Very large Shogi variant.
- Symgi. A Shogi variant with back ranks filled with symmetric pieces. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Charles Gilman.
- Swedish Cannon Chess. Mats Winther's new piece and game on the Game Courier. Inventor: Mats Winther.
- Suzumu Shogi. 16x16 variant based on Tenjiku Shogi. (16x16, Cells: 256) By A. M. DeWitt.
- Stock Goes East 49 files. Stockschach-style analogues to Shogi, Xiang Qi, and offshoots. (7x(7x9), Cells: 441) By Charles Gilman.
- Stock Goes East 25 files. Stockschach-style analogues to Shogi, Xiang Qi, and offshoots. (5x(5x9), Cells: 225) By Charles Gilman.
- Stacked-Copying Shogi. Missing description (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Southern Shogi. Shogi variant where pieces move like friendly pieces `south' of them. (9x9, Cells: 81)
- Silver General. Shogi piece that moves one square diagonally, or forward.
- Sigma 4 Shogi. Missing description (7x7, Cells: 49) By Daniel Roth.
- Shoxiang 108. A combination of Shogi and Xiang Qi on a number of ranks divisible by both 2 and 3. (9x12, Cells: 108) By Charles Gilman.
- Shosu Shogi. 10x10 Shogi variant with Queens and more powerful promoted pieces. By A. M. DeWitt.
- Shosu Shogi. 10x10 Shogi variant with Queens and more powerful promoted pieces. By A. M. DeWitt.
- Shoko Shogi. Smaller variant of Hook Shogi on a 13x13 board. (13x13, Cells: 169) By A. M. DeWitt.
- Shogun Chess. Pieces promote and can be dropped, similar to Shogi. By Daniel Lee.
- Shogi-set Nearlydouble Variants. Variants using two Shogi sets, minus a second King aside, but with moves adjusted for a large board. (13x12, Cells: 156) By Charles Gilman.
- Shogi-of-Chesstonia. 9 x 12 Shogi Variant that includes a Queen and some Modern Shatranj Pieces. By Gary K. Gifford.
- Shogi-of-Chesstonia. 9 x 12 Shogi Variant that includes a Queen and some Modern Shatranj Pieces. (9x12, Cells: 108) By Gary K. Gifford.
- Shogi With Pokémons. Pokemons with special powers are added to an otherwise normal shogi board. (11x11, Cells: 121) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Shogi with Impassable Kings. A modest fix to Shogi that makes impasses impossible. By Fergus Duniho.
- Shogi with Cannons. Missing description (9x9, Cells: 81) By John Smith.
- Shogi WDA: Alquerque army. Experimental army, supposed to be played against standart Shogi army. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Daniil Frolov.
- Shogi Variants Site. Wikipedia dedicated to Shogi Variants.
- Shogi Variant Software . Index of shogi variant software (in Japanese).
- Shogi Variant Program. Home page of a freeware program, that allows humans to play shogi and 11 variants of shogi. (Link.).
- Shogi set. Photographs of a Shogi set.
- Shogi set. Photo's of shogi (Japanese chess) set.
- Shogi Pieces. Graphics of shogi pieces and symbols.
- Shogi Photo. Photo of crafted Shogi set.
- Shogi of the Central Madness. The center square is madness! You need card and dice to decide its effect. (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Shogi for Chess Players. Introduction to Shogi geared for western chess players.
- Shogi for Beginners. Missing description
- Shogi : Japan's Game of Strategy. Missing description
- Shogi 59. Shogi on half of a 9x12 board. (9x13, Cells: 59) By John Smith.
- Shogi web site . Web site on Shogi and its variants.
- Shogi. Play the Japanese form of Chess, in which captured pieces can be dropped back as your own. (Recognized!)
- Shogi. Play the Japanese form of Chess with Jocly.
- Shogi . Westernized version using Alfaerie graphics.
- Shogi. Missing description (9x9, Cells: 81) (Recognized!)
- Shogi, Mortal Shogi, and Kamikaze Mortal Shogi . Optimized ZRFs for Japanese Chess and some recent variants.
- Shogessi.... A link to the Tabletop Simulator module. Updated rules/graphics. (17x(17x19), Cells: 289) By Eric Watkins.
- Shogessi (The Allday Wars) . An original large, multiplayer Chess/Shogi variant.
- Shogchess. Missing description (9x11, Cells: 99) By Hafsteinn Kjartansson.
- Shocky. A program that plays Shogi.
- Sho Shogi. Historic predecessor of shogi. (9x9, Cells: 81)
- Shatranji. Chessgi with Shatranj pieces. By Fergus Duniho.
- Shanghai Palace Chess. A blend of Chinese, Japanese, and Western Chess. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Gary K. Gifford.
- sFhIoDgEi. A variant nesting two different smaller variants within it. (17x17, Cells: 289) By Charles Gilman.
- Seireigi. Variant of standard Shogi with promotable Gold Generals, as well as more varied and animalistic promotions. Inventor: A. M. DeWitt.
- Seireigi. Variant of standard Shogi with promotable Gold Generals, as well as more varied and animalistic promotions. (9x9, Cells: 81) By A. M. DeWitt.
- Seireigi. Variant of standard Shogi with promotable Gold Generals, as well as more varied and animalistic promotions. (9x9, Cells: 81) By A. M. DeWitt.
- Seikaku Ni Wanai Shogi. Shogi with no strong pieces, but very strong promotions. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Lev Grigoriev.
- Sankaku Shogi. Small Shogi variant played on a board of 44 triangles with no drops and a teleporting Emperor. (7x8, Cells: 44) By Larry L. Smith.
- Sankaku Shogi . Small Shogi variant played on a board of 44 triangles with no drops and a teleporting Emperor. By Larry L. Smith.
- Saisho shogi. Game with one dice-shaped shared piece. By Francesco Fonseca.
- Saint Pancras Shogi. double-set Sainted Shogi variant with half the pieces starting promoted. (11x12, Cells: 132) By Charles Gilman.
- Ryu Shogi. Large modern shogi variant. (7x12, Cells: 84) By Jared B. McComb.
- Rutherford’s 1-dimensional Shogi. Modern one-dimensional chess variant, based upon Shogi. (1x17, Cells: 17) By Jonathan H Rutherford.
- Rutherford's 1-dimensional Shogi. Modern one-dimensional chess variant, based upon Shogi. Inventor: Jonathan H Rutherford.
- Rules for historic Shogi variants. Missing description
- Questions and answers: Shogi. Questions and answers about Shogi (Japanese Chess).
- Quarterboard. Small variant with no pawns and piece drops, inspired by Chess and Shogi. By Milan Zeiske.
- Quadd Shogi. Shogi with 4 squares for each one space in normal Shogi. (18x18, Cells: 324) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- QB Goes East 98 squares. Quadruple Besiege versions of Shogi, Xiang Qi, and offshoots using single sets on 2 7x7 boards. (Cells: 98) By Charles Gilman.
- QB Goes East 162 squares. Quadruple Besiege versions of Shogi, Xiang Qi, and offshoots using double sets on 2 9x9 boards. (Cells: 162) By Charles Gilman.
- Point-Power Shogi. A shogi variant with ever growing supply of pieces on a TI-92 calculator. (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Pocket Shogi Plus. Shogi Like game with a pocket to store and move pieces. By .
- Pocket Shogi Copper. A Variant of Shogi with Copper General and Pocket. By .
- Homemade Symbolic Shogi Pieces. Photos of pieces made from computer printed stickers on foam board. By Fergus Duniho.
- Shogi Set. Photo's of wooden Shogi (Japanese chess) set.
- Pawn Shogi. Experimental shogi variant with different types of pawns. (7x7, Cells: 49) By Eric V. Greenwood.
- Partnership Mitregi. Unthemed 4-player variant with most pieces always moving toward or across the River. (8x8, Cells: 64) By Charles Gilman.
- Paper Shogi Board and Tokens Craft Project. Free Shogi game PDFs of several styles of boards and Shogi pieces that you can print out and use to make your own Shogi board. By Terrance Davis.
- Palace Shogi. A complicated hybrid of Shogi, Xiang Qi, and Chess. By Silvia Hollinshead.
- One King Shogi. Checkmate the neutral king. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Daniil Frolov.
- Ogi. Missing description By Cyril Veltin.
- Nutty Shogi. Pieces jump over many others, and a Fire Demon burns neighbors. (13x13, Cells: 169) By H. G. Muller.
- Nutty Shogi. Smaller version of Tenjiku Shogi on a 13x13 board. Inventor: H. G. Muller.
- Notake Shogi. All pieces stay on the Shogi board at all times. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Charles Gilman.
- Nine elders. Sittuyin + Shogi. By Daphne Snowmoon.
- Nested Shogi. A variant hiding Shogi on its diagonals. (17x17, Cells: 177) By Charles Gilman.
- Narikin Shogi. Shogi with promoted gold generals. (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Nana-Shogi. Shogi variant on a tiny board. By Georg Dunkel.
- Mortal Shogi. A Shogi variant in which pieces aren't all immortal. (9x9, Cells: 81) Inventor: Roberto Lavieri and Fergus Duniho.
- Mortal Shogi. Play this Shogi variant in which pieces may die. Inventor: Roberto Lavieri and Fergus Duniho.
- Modern drunk elephant shogi. Missing description By Daniil Frolov.
- Modern drunk elephant shogi. Missing description (9x9, Cells: 81) By Daniil Frolov.
- Mitsugumi Shogi. Smaller variant of Suzumu Shogi on a 13x13 board. (13x13, Cells: 169) By A. M. DeWitt.
- Mitsugumi Shogi. Smaller variant of Suzumu Shogi on a 13x13 board. (13x13, Cells: 169) By A. M. DeWitt.
- Mitregi with compounds of duals. An extra border around the Gnuqi and Wildebishogi array houses forward-only counterparts. (11x11, Cells: 121) By Charles Gilman.
- Mitregi. Larger Shogi variant with more powerful diagonal pieces. (10x9, Cells: 90) By Charles Gilman.
- Mitred Framing 3: 6x6 to 8x8. Adding a rim of forward-only pieces around a 6x6 board. (8x8, Cells: 64) By Charles Gilman.
- Mitred Framing 2: 9 files to 10x10. Puts most pieces of 9-file variants on FIDE board and adds extra rim including middle-file piece and Shogi-style extras. (10x10, Cells: 100) By Charles Gilman.
- Mitred Framing 1: 8x8 to 10x10. Adding a rim of forward-only pieces around a FIDE-size board. (10x10, Cells: 100) By Charles Gilman.
- MiTaWi. A variant combining elements on Mitregi, Taijitu Qi, and Wildeurasian Qi. (14x12, Cells: 64) By Charles Gilman.
- Missionary cubic variants. Cubic-cell game with mixture of simple and compound forward-only pieces. (6x(6x8), Cells: 288) By Charles Gilman.
- Minjiku Shogi. Wild shogi variant, with pieces that burn neighbors or jump many pieces. (10x10, Cells: 104) By H. G. Muller.
- Minishogi setuper. Minishogi you can set up pieces at beginning of the game. (5x5, Cells: 25) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Minishogi. On a 5 by 5 board. (5x5, Cells: 25) (Recognized!) Inventor: Shigenobu Kusumo.
- Mini-Shogi. Missing description
- Mini Shogi. Play this smallest of Japanese Shogi variants on Jocly. Inventor: Shigenobu Kusumo.
- Millennium Chu Shogi . http://pika.cs.nctu.edu.tw/lit/MillenniumShogi.zip. By Yu Ren Dong.
- Microshogi . Small shogi variant on a 4 by 5 board. Inventor: Oyama Yasuharu.
- Meta-chess Digital Edition. Digital Copy of 'Meta-chess' by John W Brown.
- Medusa Shogi. A Shogi variant of Pillars of Medusa, which is based on Turkish Great Chess. By Gary K. Gifford.
- Medusa Shogi. Missing description Inventor: Gary K. Gifford.
- Medusa Shogi. Missing description (11x11, Cells: 121) By Gary K. Gifford.
- Mansindam. A variant that combines 'drop' rule and strong pieces, and there is no draw. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Daphne Snowmoon.
- Maka-Dai-Dai Shogi pictures. Photos of a commercial Maka-dai-dai Shogi set.
- Maka-Dai-Dai Shogi. Historical ultra large Shogi variant.
- Maka Dai Dai Shogi. Pieces promote on capture, some to multi-capturing monsters. (19x19, Cells: 361)
- Mad Queen Shogi. Missing description (8x8, Cells: 64) By Larry L. Smith.
- Mad Elephant Shogi. Missing description (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Macadamia Shogi. Pieces promote on capture to multi-capturing monsters. (13x13, Cells: 169) By H. G. Muller.
- Long-King Shogi. Long-king moves very far but don't let it get captured. (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Little Trio. Missing description Inventor: Jared B. McComb.
- Little Trio. Small variant combining Chess, Shogi, and Xiang-Qi. (7x7, Cells: 49) By Jared B. McComb.
- Lion. Powerful piece from Shogi variant.
- The Shogi Foundation. Organization selling books on Shogi and a portable shogi set.
- Larger Wildeurasian variants. increasing the 2+2+1 piece groups from three to five or six. (12x12, Cells: 144) By Charles Gilman.
- Landing force shogi. Missing description (9x9, Cells: 81) By Daniil Frolov.
- Lance. Moves one or more squares straight forward.
- Ladies and Generals. Missing description (6x(6x9), Cells: 324) By Charles Gilman.
- Kyoto Shogi and Hex Kyoto Shogi . Small shogi variants. (Link.).
- Kyoto Shogi. Modern 5x5 Shogi variant where pieces promote and unpromote with every move.
- Kyoshogi . Variant of Shogi on a 10x10 board.
- Kuuzen Dai Shogi. Dai Shogi with different promotions, invented by Eric Silverman. (15x15, Cells: 225) Inventor: Eric Silverman.
- Kozune vs FIDE. Missing description By Daniil Frolov.
- Kozune. Missing description By Daniil Frolov.
- Kozeriai. A 5x7 variant of Shogi. (5x7, Cells: 35) By Jan Paerke.
- Kokusai Sannin Shogi. Three-handed Shogi variant. (Cells: 127) Inventor: Tanigasaki Jisuke.
- Kira Chess/Kira Shogi. "Kira" and "L" pieces which is not known by your opponent. (8x8, Cells: 64) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Kinzoku. Small variant for little ones, is based on Dobutsu but is very different from it. (3x5, Cells: 15) By Lev Grigoriev.
- Kingsmen. 9x9 board with two extra Bishops. Pieces gain the King's moveset upon reaching the last three ranks. By Albert Lee.
- Kinging shogi. Missing description (9x9, Cells: 81) By Daniil Frolov.
- King. Royal piece moving one in arbitrary direction.
- Kilyow. Invented by Furugouri Akio(古郡章雄) in 1991. By Yu Ren Dong.
- Ki Shogi. Variant of Shogi played without a board, and pieces are cubes. By Larry L. Smith.
- Ki Shogi. Variant of Shogi played without a board, and pieces are cubes. By Larry L. Smith.
- Kasparov's Premiere at Shogi. Chess world champion plays a game of Shogi.
- Kamikaze Mortal Shogi. Send your Kamikazes on suicide missions in this Shogi variant. (9x9, Cells: 81) Inventor: Fergus Duniho and Roberto Lavieri.
- Kamikaze Mortal Shogi. Send your Kamikazes on suicide missions in this Shogi variant. Inventor: Fergus Duniho and Roberto Lavieri.
- Kagamigi. Shogi variant featuring pieces biased toward the center. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Bob Greenwade.
- Judkin's Shogi. Small shogi variant on 6 by 6 board. (6x6, Cells: 36) Inventor: ? Judkin.
- Judkin's Shogi. Modern small shogi variant preset. Inventor: ? Judkin.
- Ito Shogi. Missing description (1x31, Cells: 21) By Jonathan H Rutherford.
- Ito Shogi . Missing description Inventor: Jonathan H Rutherford.
- The Art of Shogi. Information on book on Shogi.
- Immobilizer Shogi. Piece that can immobilize other pieces. (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Idaidakama Shogi. Like Maka-Dai-Dai with drops and new pieces. (19x19, Cells: 361) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- iChess. Missing description (8x8, Cells: 64) By Pangus Ho.
- iChess . Missing description By Pangus Ho.
- How to Play Shogi. A book on Japanese chess, Shogi.
- Hourglass Hex Chess. 2 overlapping triangles form a hex board of just over FIDE size. (9x9, Cells: 65) By Charles Gilman.
- Horn Rimmed Hex 2: 61 to 91. Continuation of hex analogue to the Mitred Framing series. (11x11, Cells: 91) By Charles Gilman.
- Horn Rimmed Hex 1: 91 to 127. Start of hex analogue to the Mitred Framing series. (13x13, Cells: 127) By Charles Gilman.
- Hook Shogi. 16x16 variant with the hook movers from the largest Shogi variants. (16x16, Cells: 256) By A. M. DeWitt.
- Hoo Mitregi. Intermediate between Mitregi itself and Dai Mitregi. (12x12, Cells: 144) By Charles Gilman.
- Honorable Horse. Moves forward as a Knight.
- Honeycomb Minishogi. Hex-prism version of 3d Minishogi, with compulsory setup phase. (4x(4x5), Cells: 50) By Charles Gilman.
- Honeycomb goes East. Shogi and Xiang Qi on a Hex-prism board. (16x9, Cells: 144) By Charles Gilman.
- Historical Chess Variants . Part of a document describing various Historical Chess Variants.
- Hishigata Shogi. Variation of Maka-Dai-Dai Shogi (ultra large Shogi). (19x19, Cells: 361) By Sean Humby.
- Hex Shogi . A new family of hexagonal Shogi variants. By Fergus Duniho.
- Hexgi. A Wellisch-style hex interpretation of Shogi, with "officers" using selected orthogonals. (Cells: 91) By Charles Gilman.
- Hex Shogi 91. A hexagonal Shogi variant on a 91-space board. (Cells: 91) By Fergus Duniho.
- Hex Shogi 91. A hexagonal Shogi variant on a 91-space board. By Fergus Duniho.
- Hex Shogi 81. A hexagonal Shogi variant on an 81-space board. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Fergus Duniho.
- Hex Shogi 81. A hexagonal Shogi variant on an 81-space board. By Fergus Duniho.
- Hex Shogi 41. Hexagonal shogivariant on board with 41 squares. (Cells: 41) By Fergus Duniho.
- Hex Shogi 41. Hexagonal shogivariant on board with 41 spaces. By Fergus Duniho.
- Hex Shogi. A new family of hexagonal Shogi variants. By Fergus Duniho.
- Hex Horngi. To hex cells what Mitregi is to square ones and Tunnelshogi to cubic ones. (Cells: 91) By Charles Gilman.
- Heian-Dai Shogi. Early Great Shogi. (13x13, Cells: 169)
- Heian Shogi. or Early Shogi. A predecessor of Shogi. (9x8, Cells: 72)
- Hasami Shogi. Popular Japanese game, playable with Shogi set. (9x9, Cells: 81)
- Hand Shogi. Modern shogi variant with many pieces to drop. (9x9, Cells: 81) Inventor: John William Brown.
- Half Shogi and Half Xiang Qi. Applying the principles of Half Chess to Oriental games. (5x9, Cells: 45) By Charles Gilman.
- Half Nearlydouble Chess and offshoots. Chess enlarged and then shrunk again - or vice versa. (5x12, Cells: 60) By Charles Gilman.
- Hajiku Shogi. Inspired by Shogi and Chu Shogi. Pieces can both promote and demote in promotion zone. By Edward Webb.
- Haiku Shogi. 4-player Shogi with 5+7+5 grouping of orthogonals in both dimensions. (17x17, Cells: 289) By Charles Gilman.
- Gyokugi. Extends chevron ranks to analogues of Shogi generals, named after individual jewels. (11x11, Cells: 91) By Charles Gilman.
- Gufuu Shogi . Tiny variant on a 2x3 board with four pieces. By Georg Dunkel.
- Great Whale Shogi. Large board based on Whale and Wa Shogi. Inventor: R. Wayne Schmittberger.
- Great Whale Shogi. Great Whale Shogi by R. Wayne Schmittberger. (11x11, Cells: 121) Inventor: R. Wayne Schmittberger.
- Grand Shogi. Normal Shogi, but with extra pieces. By Christine Bagley-Jones.
- Gold General. Shogi piece that moves one square but not diagonally backwards.
- Beautiful Sun Chess (Meiriqi) . 10x10 blend of FIDE, Shogi, and Xiangqi influences. By Glenn Overby II.
- Beautiful Sun Chess (Meiriqi). A 10x10 blend of FIDE, Shogi, and Xiangqi influences. (10x10, Cells: 100) By Glenn Overby II.
- Gi-Qi-Game. Another one crossover of European, Chinese and Japanese chess. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Daniil Frolov.
- German Chu Shogi Association. Missing description
- The Game of Three Generals. Each player has three generals, which command different sections of his army. (9x9, Cells: 81) By John Smith.
- Futashikana Shogi. Expanded version of Shosu Shogi played on an 11x11 board. By A. M. DeWitt.
- Futashikana Shogi. Expanded version of Shosu Shogi played on an 11x11 board. By A. M. DeWitt.
- Fusion Mitregi. Shogi board, camps full of Mitregi 1st/2nd rank pieces that can combine pairwise. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Charles Gilman.
- Frontofhouse. Captured pieces return with only their forward moves. (8x8, Cells: 64) By Charles Gilman.
- Fraction Shogi. Shogi with fractional moves. (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Four Player Shogi. Variant of Shogi for four players. (15x15, Cells: 189)
- Flyover Shogi. A 4-player Shogi with each player facing all 3 others. (Cells: 162) By Charles Gilman.
- Flipped-return Nichtschach. Pieces return as something else on the same 3d board. (6x(6x6), Cells: 216) By Charles Gilman.
- Flip Shogi. Missing description Inventor: John William Brown.
- Five-Minute Poppy Shogi. Small shogi variant on a 4 by 5 board. (4x5, Cells: 20) Inventor: Oyama Yasuharu.
- Fairy Pieces Part 1. Missing description By Christine Bagley-Jones.
- Fairy Pieces part 1 . zillions file with many shogi pieces. By Christine Bagley-Jones.
- EurasiaChess: Photos of Chessmen Shogi Pieces adaptation. http://www.eurasia-chess.com. By Emmanuel Baud.
- EurasiaChess Shogi Graphics. Graphics of shogi pieces mixing European chess symbols & Japanese Kanji. By Emmanuel Baud.
- EurasiaChess Shogi . Shogi and mini-Shogi with mixed chess-symbols&Japanese-Kanjis.
- Eurasia-Chess Chessmen Piece Set. for Chess, XiangQi, Shogi and other Chess variants. By Emmanuel Baud.
- Elephant_Shogi. A Traditional Shogi game with Elephants added. (11x9, Cells: 64) By .
- Elephant Chess Club. Webshop selling internationalized Xiangqi and Shogi sets.
- Easterhouse. Captured pieces switch between Xiang Qi and Shogi boards. (9x19, Cells: 171) By Charles Gilman.
- Dual Direction Variants. Adding extra moves to pieces in historic forms of Chess. By Charles Gilman.
- Dragon Horse. Moves as Bishop or Wazir.
- Double Eight-directional Knight Shogi. Shogi with Western knights. Promoted knight = gold + Western knight.
- Dobutsu Shogi. The smallest Shogi variant made for kids to learn Shogi. (3x4, Cells: 12) Inventor: Madoka Kitao.
- Decay Shogi. Pieces decay if held too long. (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Dai-Ryu Shogi. Large Shogi variant with new pieces. (9x16, Cells: 144) By Jared B. McComb.
- Dai-Dai Shogi pictures. Photos of a commercial Dai-dai Shogi set.
- Dai Shogi pictures. Photos of a commercial Dai Shogi set.
- Dai Shogi. Shogi variant on 15 by 15 board. (Link.).
- Dai Shogi. Large armies including a multi-capturing Lion battle each other on a big board. (15x15, Cells: 225)
- Dai Seireigi. Variant of Dai Shogi playable with drops. (15x15, Cells: 225) By A. M. DeWitt.
- Dai Seireigi. Variant of Dai Shogi playable with drops. (15x15, Cells: 225) By A. M. DeWitt.
- Dai Mitregi. Still larger Mitregi offshoot, replacing the Generals with longer-range pieces. (16x16, Cells: 256) By Charles Gilman.
- Dai Dai Shogi Western. Missing description (17x17, Cells: 289)
- Dai Dai Shogi. Historical large Shogi variant. (17x17, Cells: 289)
- Dai Dai Shogi. Extremely large Shogi variant invented in the 17th century.
- Shogi: Cut-Out Symbolic Shogi Pieces. Make your own Shogi set.
- Cube Shogi. Shogi with cube-shaped pieces. By John Smith.
- Crazy 38's. Ben Good's Crazy 38's on the Game Courier. Inventor: Ben Good.
- Copper, Silver, Gold: An Indestructible Metallic Alloy. Game with indestructible metallic alloys. (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Color Square Shogi. Shogi with color squares you place at beginning of game. (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Classic sum - light version. Missing description (9x10, Cells: 90) By Daniil Frolov.
- Classic sum. Missing description (9x10, Cells: 90) By Daniil Frolov.
- Classic Average. Missing description (9x9, Cells: 81) By Kuyan Judith.
- Chu Shogi pictures. Photos of a commercial Chu Shogi set.
- Chu Shogi. Historic Japanese favorite, featuring a multi-capturing Lion. (12x12, Cells: 144) (Recognized!)
- Chu Shogi. Shogi variant on 12 by 12 board.
- Chu Shogi. Historic Japanese favorite, featuring a multi-capturing Lion.
- Chu Seireigi. Variant of Chu Shogi playable with drops. Inventor: A. M. DeWitt.
- Chu Seireigi. Variant of Chu Shogi playable with drops. (12x12, Cells: 144) By A. M. DeWitt.
- Chu Seireigi. Variant of Chu Shogi playable with drops. (12x12, Cells: 144) By A. M. DeWitt.
- Choson chess. Korean game, resembling Shogi, mentioned in a novel.
- Chogi. Cross between Shogi and Chess.
- Chess Remix. Create your chess variant. () By Alexandr Oleshko.
- Chess Dial. Play starts with Shogi, then mutates into Xiang Qi, then FIDE Chess, then Shogi again! (9x10, Cells: 90) By John Smith.
- Cashew Shogi. Many pieces must promote on capture, and some can multi-capture. (13x13, Cells: 169) By H. G. Muller.
- Cannon Shosu Shogi. Variant of Shosu Shogi with Dogs and Cannons. By A. M. DeWitt.
- Cannon Shosu Shogi. Variant of Shosu Shogi with Dogs and Cannons. By A. M. DeWitt.
- Cannon Shogi and Cannon Chess. Played on a 9x9 Shogi board, feature various types of 'Cannon' pieces. (9x9, Cells: 81) By Peter Michaelsen.
- Cannon Shogi . Played on a 9x9 Shogi board, feature various types of 'Cannon' pieces. Inventor: Peter Michaelsen.
- Bushi Shogi. Extremely small shogi variant played with cube pieces. Inventor: Georg Dunkel.
- Bushi shogi. Shogi variant on a two-square board! Bushi means Samurai. By Georg Dunkel.
- Blind Shogi. Missing description
- Bishogi. An attempt to take the FIDE army further towards Shogi than Chessgi does. (8x8, Cells: 64) By Charles Gilman.
- BCMShogi. A versatile and customizable Shogi program. Inventor: Bernard C. Maerz.
- Battle of titans. Missing description (3x(9x5), Cells: 135) By Daniil Frolov.
- Bario Shogi. A shogi game with pieces that can be change typed. (9x9, Cells: 81) By (zzo38) A. Black.
- Arena Cheturshogqi. 2-4 Players on large board with mutating pieces and piece drops. (13x13, Cells: 169) By Paul E. Newton.
- Korean Shogi. Shogi variant where pieces move like a friendly piece directly behind it. (9x9, Cells: 81)
- Annan Shogi . Shogi variant where pieces move like a friendly piece directly behind it (and similar variants).
- Ancient world war. Play this game on Game Courier. By Daniil Frolov.
- Ancient world war. Missing description (8x8, Cells: 64) By Daniil Frolov.
- American Chu Shogi Association. Missing description
- All pieces of classic chesses. Missing description (9x10, Cells: 90) By Daniil Frolov.
- All pieces of classic chesses. Missing description By Daniil Frolov.
- Alibishogi. Variant with Shogi-style promotion and drops themed on Alibaba and 40 Thieves. (10x10, Cells: 100) By Charles Gilman.
- 81Dojo. The International Shogi Server.
- 4 Faces. 2d multiplayer variant based on a feature of Tunnelshogi. (9x9, Cells: 45) By Charles Gilman.
- Dimensionalized. 3D version of checkers, chess and shogi. By Paul Glover.
- 3D Shogi. Three dimensional version of Japanese Chess. By Larry L. Smith.
- 3d Minishogi. A variant originally devised for a contest that never materialised. (3x(3x5), Cells: 45) By Charles Gilman.
- 125 Percent Shogi and 125 Percent Xiang Qi. 4-player versions of Oriental variants on cross-shaped boards. (15x15, Cells: 125) By Charles Gilman.