9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | |
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歩 | 銀 | 歩 | 6 | ||||||
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角 | 金 | 銀 | 金 | 飛 | 8 | ||||
香 | 桂 | 玉 | 桂 | 香 | 9 |
Climbing Silver (棒銀 bōgin, literally "pole-silver") is a shogi strategy.
Climbing Silver involves advancing a silver upward along with an advanced or dropped pawn supported by the rook aiming to break through the opponent's camp on their bishop's side.[1]
Many different Static Rook shogi openings include a Climbing Silver component. For instance, Climbing Silver can be played as part of Double Wing Attack, Fortress, or Bishop Exchange openings. (However, there are other variants of these openings that don't include Climbing Silver.) Climbing Silver can also be used against Ranging Rook opponents as well.
Diagonal Climbing Silver or Oblique Climbing Silver (斜め棒銀 naname bōgin) is a Climbing Silver attack involving the left silver which moves diagonally from its starting position on 7i to attack on the third or second files. This type of Climbing Silver is typical in Static Rook vs Ranging Rook games.
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Japanese. (December 2016) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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