I like the simplified char. set in post 23,
especially on an iPhone 4S screen.
( And I can read all the Shogi kanjis no problem.
CutFirstThinkLater wrote:As someone who hasn't grown up with any of these four but tried them all (I grew up playing Janggi) I guess I can cast a neutral vote, and to me it's definitely Shogi. Because of the 'capture and drop anywhere' rule its complexity level is almost on par with Go and far more dynamic than any other variant of its kind. No wonder it's been held in nearly the same high esteem as Go in Japan - a privilege its cousins in China and Korea couldn't enjoy.
LifeIn9x9 wrote:While the number of board positions is less than Go, wouldn't the number of possible game (records) be larger that Go, even considering various repetition rules for Shogi?
Joelnelsonb wrote:How many moves does an average game of Shogi consist of? And are we talking "Chess moves" or "Go moves"? They are different.
Seems the other way around ? Each of the 16 xiangqi pieces is free to move from the start,Xiangqi seems like a good casual chess game. The perks of a slower pace and limited movement... to western chess...
moyoaji, how to type the chess characters ?moyoaji wrote:♞ ♙ ♚
EdLee wrote:moyoaji, how to type the chess characters ?
Deglet_Nour wrote:I think the fact that Elephants can't cross rivers, Horse can't leap over pieces and the Advisors (and General) having such limited movement options make the game quite a bit slower and less brutal than western chess. But again, it may be me speaking as a beginner in both games.
moyoaji wrote:...
Compared to go, however, all versions of chess are effectively the same. Go is so many orders of magnitude more complex that it only makes sense to compare it with chess games because those already are hard for us humans to wrap our heads around. From a distance, both look to be the same size, but chess is a big rock several meters away, while go is a mountain a kilometer off. And even those farthest up the mountain have hardly left its base...