For example if you want to drop a pawn to check the king but not to mate him (you cannot mate with pawn drops).
The first kanji in Hidan's name (飛) stands for hisha, the rook in Shogi.
Shotest Shogi happened in 360.
Many shogi sets are available in Japan. Or you can search for a shop online that deals with shogi equipment.
The strategic advantage of a bishop and rook working together against a rook in chess is that they can control more squares on the board and coordinate their attacks effectively. The bishop's long-range diagonal movement complements the rook's horizontal and vertical movement, allowing them to cover a wider area and create threats. However, a disadvantage is that the bishop and rook may need open lines to work together effectively, and if the opponent's rook can control these lines or block their coordination, their advantage may be diminished.
A wrong rook pawn is a rook pawn within an endgame in chess which is unable to promote under the protection of a bishop, due to the promoting square being of the colour that the single friendly bishop cannot control.
Your pawn can promote to a Knight, Bishop, Rook or Queen. You CANNOT promote into a new King, however.
Shotest Shogi was created in 2008-06.
Nothing special happens, the rook is just on the last rank(it is the first rank if you are playing as black). Pawns are the only piece that can promote.
In general, a rook vs bishop endgame is not a draw. The rook has more power and flexibility than the bishop, giving it an advantage in most situations. However, the outcome can depend on the specific position and player skill.
Shogi Silver's birth name is Shawgi Abbas Silver.
In general, the queen vs rook endgame is not a draw. The queen has a significant advantage over the rook due to its greater mobility and attacking power. However, the outcome of the game ultimately depends on the specific position and the skill of the players.
The rule that a pawn can not give checkmate probably stems from the rule that a piece may not be placed in a position from where it is unable to promote or continue. A pawn may only give checkmate by being placed directly in front of the emperor; a position from where it is unable to move or promote. It can not take the emperor piece as it could with other pieces, and it can not be promoted until it moves again. In Shogi, violating rules such as "Two pawns can not occupy the same column" or "a piece can not be placed in a position where it is unable to move or promote" results in an immediate loss for the one who violated the rule. Thus, by placing a pawn in this location, the player automatically loses the game by violation of a rule. The checkmate that the player gives doesn't matter because it was obtained through the rule's violation. In certain Shogi variations, such as yari shogi, a pawn can be used to give checkmate.