CBGChinese Board Games GuideRules and annotated records for strategy learners

Traditional Chinese Board Games

Traditional Games Endgame Record: Rat F6xI7 Shape Check

First line1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4

Main mistake: treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route

inside this line, name the visible demand, read the 6-entry finishing pattern as a family strategy games record note: connect piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry to Rat F6xI7, trace the final route, capture, promotion, territory, or hand-completion checkpoint, use the fragment as a rules-and-notation checkpoint before opening another archive page, and then pick a related record that changes one reading task without changing the game family.

all-levelsEndgame and finishing patterns6 record entries
Line to read first1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4

when checking the reply, separate habit from proof, Traditional Chinese Board Games habits can mislead here, so begin with camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5 and keep piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry in view while reading 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4. The all-levels job is to tie the rule card to one readable notation line before opening outside records. The page is useful only if that first inspection changes how this family strategy games finish pattern: shape check record is read.

Critical turnwith the same-game path, hold the answer lightly, the record bends at 6.

with the same-game path, hold the answer lightly, the record bends at 6. Rat I7-A4 | Den pressure. In this Traditional Chinese Board Games finishing pattern, it is the first place where Tiger A4-K8 tests whether the earlier plan was more than activity. Write this beside it: The line converts when the small piece keeps the route open for the den attack.

Why the level mattersReference shape

For this record, let the diagram lead, use the outside source only after the local notation is clear enough to compare without copying a named score. For finish pattern: shape check, the plan is not to memorize the line; it is to explain why Tiger A4-K8 changes the answer.

Read the record first

1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4

when checking the reply, separate habit from proof, Traditional Chinese Board Games habits can mislead here, so begin with camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5 and keep piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry in view while reading 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4. The all-levels job is to tie the rule card to one readable notation line before opening outside records. The page is useful only if that first inspection changes how this family strategy games finish pattern: shape check record is read.

Position cue: a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern

Opening line1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4

finishing pattern: the small piece tests the river lane while the stronger piece holds camp.

Level shapeReference note

In the margin note, avoid the broad label, mixed-level readers get an intentionally short record: it gives a reusable checkpoint around Rat F6xI7 before the reader opens a level-specific record page. Board cue: camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5. Rule check: piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry. The notation uses Jungle/Dou Shou Qi piece-coordinate notation. The first two entries are 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4; 2. Cat G6-H7 | Wolf B4-A4, which keeps the explanation tied to promotion, capture timing, territory closure, final route efficiency, or safe hand completion.

Reader jobEndgame and finishing patterns

inside this line, name the visible demand, after this finish pattern: shape check record, add a margin note explaining why Tiger A4-K8 matters before the next same-game record is opened. The durable idea is that Rat F6xI7 must survive Tiger A4-K8 under piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry.

  1. 1Find the cue

    while the notation is fresh, make the cue do work, treat 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 as a coordinate key: it should make camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5 easy to point at and easy to remember.

  2. 2Translate the rule

    while the notation is fresh, make the cue do work, use the rule cue as a filter: a legal-looking move is not enough if it fails the next reply and loses the position's purpose.

  3. 3Make the answer local

    while the notation is fresh, make the cue do work, use the reply as a stress test. If treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route is still hidden, reread the board cue before moving on to the finish.

  4. 4Choose the next record

    while the notation is fresh, make the cue do work, choose the next record by the thing still unclear: the rule cue, the reply timing, the visual cue, or the outside-source comparison.

Record goalEndgame and finishing patterns

The cut record task works on promotion, capture timing, territory closure, final route efficiency, or safe hand completion. Board cue: camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5. Level job: the record note keeps the rule explanation and the record example together so readers know what to inspect when they open another page. In Traditional Chinese Board Games, practice this habit: learn the goal of the specific folk game before borrowing chess or checkers habits. The page keeps the record note narrow enough that the notation, cue, and mistake can be checked together. Replay evidence: the Jungle/Dou Shou Qi piece-coordinate notation line begins move one Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4; move two Cat G6-H7 | Wolf B4-A4; inspect Rat F6xI7.

Replay first1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4

For this record, let the diagram lead, use the outside source only after the local notation is clear enough to compare without copying a named score. For finish pattern: shape check, the plan is not to memorize the line; it is to explain why Tiger A4-K8 changes the answer.

Position checkReference

with the same-game path, hold the answer lightly, the record bends at 6. Rat I7-A4 | Den pressure. In this Traditional Chinese Board Games finishing pattern, it is the first place where Tiger A4-K8 tests whether the earlier plan was more than activity. Write this beside it: The line converts when the small piece keeps the route open for the den attack.

Verify outsideAncient Chess

Compare notation and position type after the record line is clear; keep outside scores separate.

What to look at

a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern

Key decision
while the notation is fresh, make the cue do work, use the reply as a stress test. If treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route is still hidden, reread the board cue before moving on to the finish.
Mistake diagnostic
before choosing another page, make one local test, use this test before accepting the note. Ask whether the reply after Rat F6xI7 gives the opponent a concrete gain. In this Traditional Chinese Board Games finishing pattern, legality is not enough; the move also has to keep answering piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry.
After reading
inside this line, name the visible demand, after this finish pattern: shape check record, add a margin note explaining why Tiger A4-K8 matters before the next same-game record is opened. The durable idea is that Rat F6xI7 must survive Tiger A4-K8 under piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry.
Reader focusUse the next four cues before opening the reference material.
LevelReference

In the margin note, avoid the broad label, mixed-level readers get an intentionally short record: it gives a reusable checkpoint around Rat F6xI7 before the reader opens a level-specific record page. Board cue: camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5. Rule check: piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry. The notation uses Jungle/Dou Shou Qi piece-coordinate notation. The first two entries are 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4; 2. Cat G6-H7 | Wolf B4-A4, which keeps the explanation tied to promotion, capture timing, territory closure, final route efficiency, or safe hand completion.

Notation1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4

while the notation is fresh, make the cue do work, treat 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 as a coordinate key: it should make camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5 easy to point at and easy to remember.

Mistaketreating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route

before choosing another page, make one local test, use this test before accepting the note. Ask whether the reply after Rat F6xI7 gives the opponent a concrete gain. In this Traditional Chinese Board Games finishing pattern, legality is not enough; the move also has to keep answering piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry.

Next recordTraditional Games Endgame Record: Rat A3xC4 Corner Pressure

Stay in Traditional Chinese Board Games and compare the same endgame and finishing patterns topic at beginner level; the rules and notation stay familiar while the record shape gets easier or harder.

Traditional Chinese Board Games all-levels record diagram for Endgame and finishing patterns
Traditional Chinese Board Games all-levels record diagram for Endgame and finishing patterns. with the rule still visible, name the visible demand, the record image isolates the finishing pattern problem: camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5, Rat F6xI7, and the rule cue piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry. The pair separates game-material recognition from the composed record line, so readers do not mistake the image for a tournament score. It remains an original open-license record diagram with the page-specific cue in the SVG description. Source: original open-license record diagram. License: CC BY 4.0 self-authored record diagram. Open the image file.

What this record looks like

In the margin note, avoid the broad label, mixed-level readers get an intentionally short record: it gives a reusable checkpoint around Rat F6xI7 before the reader opens a level-specific record page. Board cue: camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5. Rule check: piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry. The notation uses Jungle/Dou Shou Qi piece-coordinate notation. The first two entries are 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4; 2. Cat G6-H7 | Wolf B4-A4, which keeps the explanation tied to promotion, capture timing, territory closure, final route efficiency, or safe hand completion.

Position cue

a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern

Unique asset

A self-authored SVG record diagram for this Traditional Chinese Board Games finishing pattern marks camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5. It is paired with Jungle/Dou Shou Qi piece-coordinate notation beginning 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4; 2. Cat G6-H7 | Wolf B4-A4. The public reference image pub-dou-shou-qi-lion gives readers an open-gallery board or piece reference for the same game family.

Rule check

Traditional Chinese Board Games rule check

Check this before the outside record: read 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4, name the rule source, test the position cue, and keep the mistake visible.

Open Ancient Chess
Rule sourceHow to Play Dou Shou Qi

Ancient Chess is the rule source to open first; use it for legal vocabulary before comparing this reference note.

Notation bridgePiece-coordinate route notation

Piece-coordinate notation such as Rat E5-F6 ties the animal, square, and zone together. It is the bridge between the rule map and the route being taught. On this page the first line is 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4.

Legal testa board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses

Animals usually move one orthogonal step, while special river and rank interactions change what can cross, capture, or be weakened by a trap. The rat exception and trap squares matter in records. For this page, apply it to a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path;.

Trap to watchtreating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route

The common trap is valuing a stronger animal without checking trap and den rules. A weaker piece in the right zone can change the record more than a high-rank animal in the wrong lane. Here the reader's mistake check is treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route.

How to read this record note

First replay: 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4. Keep the line short enough to say aloud before judging whether the move is good.

Then inspect: The cut record task works on promotion, capture timing, territory closure, final route efficiency, or safe hand completion. Board cue: camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5. Level job: the record note keeps the…

Outside check: Used as a rule and position reference, not as a named historic record corpus. The site's route examples remain composed annotated records.

Record format

Piece-coordinate route notation

Read the sample as a family-game notation convention, not as an official federation notation or named historic record.

1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4
Beginner

Beginner traditional-game records identify the piece, square, trap, river, or den rule before discussing tactics.

Intermediate

Intermediate records compare rank value with route value, especially when a stronger animal steps into a trap.

Advanced

Advanced records ask the reader to hold animal rank, trap status, river movement, and den entry in the same branch.

Annotated Record Fragment

Move-by-move replay

Traditional Chinese Board Games record reader

Traditional Chinese Board Games reference finish-pattern fragment starts from 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4. It is an annotated record note, not a tournament score; compare outside records for rules, notation, and position type before using it as a comparison example.

Entry 1 / 61. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4

finishing pattern: the small piece tests the river lane while the stronger piece holds camp.

Key entry: connect it to a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern.
Position cue
a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern
Mistake test
treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route
Traditional Chinese Board Games notation reader for this annotated record note
MoveNotationAnnotationReader Cue
1Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4finishing pattern: the small piece tests the river lane while the stronger piece holds camp.Key entry: connect it to a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern.
2Cat G6-H7 | Wolf B4-A4finishing pattern: both sides improve support before entering the trap square.Pause here and name the rule cue, not only the active move.
3Rat F6xI7 | Tiger A4-K8The capture is legal only because the river route was prepared.Compare with the previous reply before moving on.
4Dog H7-J8 | Elephant A3-K8The record pauses on rank and trap rules instead of importing chess habits.Pause here and name the rule cue, not only the active move.
5Cat J8-A3 | Wolf K8xI7The intermediate turn asks whether camp access is worth the exposed support piece.Compare with the previous reply before moving on.
6Rat I7-A4 | Den pressureThe line converts when the small piece keeps the route open for the den attack.Finish check: explain why treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route is unsafe here.
  1. Move 1Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4

    finishing pattern: the small piece tests the river lane while the stronger piece holds camp.

    Key entry: connect it to a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern.
  2. Move 2Cat G6-H7 | Wolf B4-A4

    finishing pattern: both sides improve support before entering the trap square.

    Pause here and name the rule cue, not only the active move.
  3. Move 3Rat F6xI7 | Tiger A4-K8

    The capture is legal only because the river route was prepared.

    Compare with the previous reply before moving on.
  4. Move 4Dog H7-J8 | Elephant A3-K8

    The record pauses on rank and trap rules instead of importing chess habits.

    Pause here and name the rule cue, not only the active move.
  5. Move 5Cat J8-A3 | Wolf K8xI7

    The intermediate turn asks whether camp access is worth the exposed support piece.

    Compare with the previous reply before moving on.
  6. Move 6Rat I7-A4 | Den pressure

    The line converts when the small piece keeps the route open for the den attack.

    Finish check: explain why treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route is unsafe here.

Common Mistake

Mistake to test: treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route. Replay 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 against a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one, then name the rule or reply that prevents it.

CommentaryOpen detailed replay notesFirst reading pass for Traditional Chinese Board Games Finish Pattern: Shape Check: Use move one Jungle Rat E5-F6…

Commentary

First reading pass for Traditional Chinese Board Games Finish Pattern: Shape Check: Use move one Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4; move two Cat G6-H7 | Wolf B4-A4 as the anchor for this finishing pattern. The board detail to find first is camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5.

Decision note for Finish Pattern: Shape Check: compare Rat F6xI7 with the tempting alternative and say what the opponent gains next.

Real gain in this finishing pattern appears one reply later. Here, Tiger A4-K8 checks whether the slower-looking choice was real.

Use the finish pattern: shape check cross-game comparison as a check, not as the record itself. This finishing pattern keeps piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry visible while the line is replayed.

By the end, point at Tiger A4-K8, explain the punishment in this finishing pattern, and choose whether the next record is easier or harder.

PracticeOpen record questions4 questions for checking the record after replay.

Record Questions

  • Which replay detail in 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4; 2. Cat G6-H7 | Wolf B4-A4 first reveals the finish pattern: shape check problem?
  • What would change in this finish pattern: shape check record if the reply Tiger A4-K8 arrived one move earlier?
  • In the finish pattern: shape check position, which candidate around Rat F6xI7 is tempting, and what part of piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry makes Tiger A4-K8 punish it?
  • Traditional Chinese Board Games: Which camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5 detail would you replay before opening the next related record page?
Level comparison

What different record levels look like

Compare the same game family across level examples before choosing the next record page. The active card marks this page's level.

Beginner recordTraditional Games Beginner First-Plan Record: Rat H7xK8 Shape Check1. Jungle Rat G6-H7 | Dog E5-D5
Same cue: a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern
1Rank
2Trap
3Den route
  1. RankStart from 1. Jungle Rat G6-H7 | Dog E5-D5 and name the shared cue: a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule.
  2. TrapCompare the reply around a trap square, an animal-rank exception, and a den-entry route; before trusting the first plan.
  3. Den routeCarry the branch to the mistake test: jumping to a stronger animal before the small piece route is protected.

6 entries, 1 plan + 1 reject: one visible plan, one rule cue, and one mistake to stop before.

Length
6 annotated entries
Branch load
Single line, no side branch
Candidates
1 plan + 1 reject
Judgment
Legal cue first: animal rank, trap square, river rule, den route, and board-zone vocabulary
Depth
Two-move window
Read for
Read one plan aloud, match it to the board cue, and stop at the first unsafe reply.
Watch
jumping to a stronger animal before the small piece route is protected
Next cue
Move up after you can name the rule cue without rereading the note.
Review task

Replay 1. Jungle Rat G6-H7 | Dog E5-D5, name a trap square, an animal-rank exception, and a den-entry route; one visible plan, then reject jumping to a stronger animal before the small piece route is protected.

Record anatomy

Beginner Traditional Chinese Board Games records are a short line built from 1. Jungle Rat G6-H7 | Dog E5-D5: one rule cue, one visible plan, and one obvious mistake around a trap square, an animal-rank exception, and a den-entry route; one visible plan and one tempting.

Opening line
Start with 1. Jungle Rat G6-H7 | Dog E5-D5; keep the first reply visible.
Rule cue
Point to animal rank, trap square, river rule, den route, and board-zone vocabulary before judging the move.
First trap
Stop at jumping to a stronger animal before the small piece route is protected instead of exploring side branches.
Ready check
Move on only after the rule cue can be named from memory.

Beginner traditional-game records identify the piece, square, trap, river, or den rule before discussing tactics.

Intermediate recordTraditional Games Intermediate Reply Record: Rat F6xI7 Safe Reply Turn1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4
Same cue: a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern
1Rank
2Trap
3Den route
  1. RankStart from 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 and name the shared cue: a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule.
  2. TrapCompare the reply around a camp support point, a rank-canceling trap, and a route before trusting the first plan.
  3. Den routeCarry the branch to the mistake test: jumping to a stronger animal before the small piece route is protected.

8 entries, 2 candidate replies: add a reply comparison before deciding which plan survives.

Length
8 annotated entries
Branch load
Main line plus reply branch
Candidates
2 candidate replies
Judgment
Timing, safety, and shape all get judged
Depth
Turning-point window
Read for
Compare two candidate plans, then explain why the reply changes timing or safety.
Watch
jumping to a stronger animal before the small piece route is protected
Next cue
Move up after you can compare both plans before seeing the answer.
Review task

Compare both replies around a camp support point, a rank-canceling trap, and a route move that beats; explain where jumping to a stronger animal before the small piece route is protected changes the plan.

Record anatomy

Intermediate Traditional Chinese Board Games records keep the same cue near a camp support point, a rank-canceling trap, and a route move that beats material; two candidate, then add candidate replies, a turning point, and one comparison line after 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4.

Main line
Anchor the comparison at 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4, not at a loose theme name.
Candidate pair
Keep two replies alive until the timing or safety test resolves them.
Turning point
Explain how jumping to a stronger animal before the small piece route is protected changes the value of the first plan.
Replay task
Before opening the answer, say which candidate survives and why.

Intermediate records compare rank value with route value, especially when a stronger animal steps into a trap.

Advanced recordTraditional Games Advanced Reply Record: Rat F6xI7 Safe Reply Turn1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4
Same cue: a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern
1Rank
2Trap
3Den route
  1. RankStart from 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 and name the shared cue: a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule.
  2. TrapCompare the reply around a river edge, a camp lane, and a den square before trusting the first plan.
  3. Den routeCarry the branch to the mistake test: entering the river lane before the rank exception is clear.

10 entries, 3+ candidate points: hold the branch, quiet preparation, and conversion test together.

Length
10 annotated entries
Branch load
Forcing branch, quiet prep, conversion
Candidates
3+ candidate points
Judgment
Every move can change the final evaluation
Depth
Full branch with source comparison
Read for
Hold the forcing branch, quiet preparation, and conversion test in the same replay.
Watch
entering the river lane before the rank exception is clear
Next cue
Stay here when you want dense branches, not just legal-move recognition.
Review task

Annotate the quiet move after 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4; prove the conversion still survives entering the river lane before the rank exception is clear.

Record anatomy

Advanced Traditional Chinese Board Games records turn 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 into a branch: forcing move, quiet preparation, conversion test, and source comparison around a river edge, a camp lane, and a den square that matters more than material; a.

Forcing branch
Track the pressure line from 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 without skipping replies.
Quiet move
Mark the preparation move that does not look urgent but keeps the branch alive.
Conversion test
Check whether entering the river lane before the rank exception is clear appears only after the defender's best reply.
Review task
Write the moment pressure becomes conversion, then compare an outside record.

Advanced records ask the reader to hold animal rank, trap status, river movement, and den entry in the same branch.

Record note

Traditional Chinese Board Games reference finish-pattern fragment starts from 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4. It is an annotated record note, not a tournament score; compare outside records for rules, notation, and position type before using it as a comparison example.

After the record line

Traditional Chinese Board Games outside-record comparison

Use this after replaying the record line. The article line is a record note; the outside source gives a comparison path, not permission to copy a score.

Rule and position sourceAncient Chess

Hold 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 beside a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one. Match outside material by notation, position type, and the trained mistake before judging move quality.

Level useReference

Use the source as a reference check: compare the notation format, rule vocabulary, and position cue before moving into beginner, intermediate, or advanced record notes.

Keep separateCompare, keep separate

Keep historic games, named players, or official notation claims only as context checks; this reference note stays an original annotated record example, separate from outside scores, player metadata, and source commentary.

Open Ancient Chess
Rule and position source

Compare this Traditional Chinese Board Games record note with real records

Use Ancient Chess to compare animal rank, trap square, river rule, den route, and board-zone vocabulary. This reference note stays an original annotated record example, not a copied score, table log, SGF file, or named-player record.

Compare sourceAncient ChessOpen source
Notation sample1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4
Comparison object

animal rank, trap square, river rule, den route, and board-zone vocabulary

  1. A
    Match the source type

    Open Ancient Chess as a rule and position source and decide whether you are comparing a real record index, a rule source, or a position reference before judging the note.

  2. B
    Match notation before quality

    Hold the article sample 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 beside the outside source. Compare notation shape, turn order, and record length before deciding whether the moves explain the same problem.

  3. C
    Match the position job

    Use the cue a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one. The outside material only helps if it trains the same board, route, tile, threat, capture, or rule-position job.

  4. D
    Keep the record note original

    Use outside move lists, player names, event labels, table logs, SGF files, or database commentary only as context checks; then return to the article's own mistake check: treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route.

Rule and position source

Traditional Chinese Board Games classic record bridge

Use 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 as the page's working line, then compare reference note shape against Ancient Chess, the classic anchor, and the trained mistake before opening a full outside score.

Working line1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4

a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern

Mistake checktreating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route

Open Ancient Chess
Classic anchorTrap and Den AnchorTrap square, animal rank, and den-entry route

Compare animal rank, trap location, river exception, den approach, and whether the line is about route value rather than material.

Open Ancient Chess
Record exemplarTrap-Den Route ExemplarCompare animal rank, trap status, river exception, den approach, and whether a route decision matters more than material strength.

Beginner pages compare one legal route; intermediate pages compare rank value with trap value; advanced pages compare animal rank, river movement, trap status, and den-entry timing in one branch.

Open Ancient Chess
BeginnerShort Traditional Chinese Board Games record: one notation line, one rule cue, and one visible mistake tied to a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses.

In the outside source, look only for the same first plan around 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4; ignore long branches until the mistake can be named plainly.

IntermediateTurning-point Traditional Chinese Board Games record: the same cue adds candidate replies, timing comparison, and a reason the first plan changes.

Compare whether the outside line tests the same reply choice and whether treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route appears one exchange later.

AdvancedDense Traditional Chinese Board Games record: forcing branch, quiet preparation, conversion test, and source comparison stay in one replay.

Use outside records to compare branch discipline and conversion timing, then keep this original annotated record example separate from outside scores.

This bridge is a reader-facing comparison guide. The article remains an annotated record note and original annotated record example, separate from outside scores, player metadata, event labels, table logs, SGF files, database commentary, and source commentary.

Rule and position source

Traditional Chinese Board Games real record check plan

Use this plan after the article replay: compare 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 with Ancient Chess, then match the position terms, level job, and mistake pattern before trusting an outside record as a useful comparison.

Open sourceAncient ChessOpen record source
First line1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4
Search terms

board-zone shortcut trap defense rank rule reverses trade rule cue notation line comparison path camp route

What should match

A useful outside Traditional Chinese Board Games record should share the notation shape 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4, the same position job around board-zone shortcut trap defense rank rule reverses trade rule cue notation line comparison path camp route, and the trained mistake treating capture as gain when camp support is real route.

What stays separate

Keep outside scores, player names, event labels, table logs, SGF files, database notes, and source commentary separate from the article body.

What the source can proveAncient Chess is the outside comparison point

Ancient Chess can prove board, route, tile, trap, threat, or position vocabulary for Traditional Chinese Board Games. Use it to compare the shape of animal rank, trap square, river rule, den route, and board-zone vocabulary; it does not prove that this compact record note is an external game record.

What this record note is1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 is a record line

This page uses 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 as a compact Traditional Chinese Board Games record line for board-zone shortcut trap defense rank rule reverses trade rule cue notation line comparison path camp route. It explains a level-specific record shape and a mistake check; it is not presented as a copied score from Ancient Chess.

How to compareMatch record shape before names

Compare notation family, turn order, animal rank, trap square, river rule, den route, and board-zone vocabulary, record level, and the mistake cue treating capture as gain when camp support is real route. A useful outside record may share the same problem without sharing every move.

What stays separateKeep source facts and article notes apart

Keep outside scores, player names, event labels, table logs, SGF files, database notes, and source commentary separate from the article body. Use Ancient Chess to check record reality, then return to the article's own annotation rather than mixing outside metadata into the article.

  1. Source
    Open the right kind of record source

    Start with Ancient Chess as a rule and position source. Decide whether the outside page is a real record index, rule document, position reference, table log, or SGF-style record before comparing moves.

  2. Line
    Match the first notation line

    Hold 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 beside the outside source. The first check is notation family, turn order, and record length, not whether the whole outside score is identical.

  3. Position
    Match the position terms

    Search by board-zone shortcut trap defense rank rule reverses trade rule cue notation line comparison path camp route. The outside material helps only when it trains the same animal rank, trap square, river rule, den route, and board-zone vocabulary.

  4. Level
    Match the record level

    Use 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 as a reference-line cue, then compare beginner, intermediate, and advanced examples for the same Traditional Chinese Board Games position terms before opening a full outside score.

  5. Separate
    Keep the record line separate

    Treat this reference note as an original annotated record example, not a named game record or copied match score. Keep outside scores, player names, event labels, table logs, SGF files, database notes, and source commentary separate from the article body.

Treat this reference note as an original annotated record example, not a named game record or copied match score.

Record references

Traditional Chinese Board Games record references

Traditional Chinese Board Games reference note starts from 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4; compare rule language, record context, classic position shape, and public image evidence before using outside material.

Rule and notationHow to Play Dou Shou QiAncient Chess

Use Ancient Chess to check legal vocabulary and Piece-coordinate route notation before reading 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4.

Compare
Compare the rule cue in a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern with animal rank, trap square, river rule, den route, and board-zone vocabulary; the article's notation sample is the first thing to keep stable.
Keep separate
The rule source supports vocabulary and legality checks while this page stays an annotated record note for Traditional Chinese Board Games.
Record contextDou Shou Qi Position and Rule ContextAncient Chess

Use Ancient Chess to compare record shape, source type, and the trained mistake: treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route.

Compare
Match 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4, turn order, record length, and the position job before judging whether an outside record trains the same decision.
Keep separate
Outside records are context checks; the move line here remains an original annotated record example, not a named-player score.
Classic positionTrap and Den AnchorAncient Chess

Trap square, animal rank, and den-entry route keeps a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern connected to a stable board, route, tile, or threat shape.

Compare
Compare animal rank, trap location, river exception, den approach, and whether the line is about route value rather than material.
Keep separate
The anchor is a lookup guide for record shape; it does not turn this annotated record note into a copied score.
Public imageWikimedia Commons Dou Shou Qi lion pieceWikimedia Commons Dou Shou Qi lion piece

Wikimedia Commons Dou Shou Qi lion piece is the public visual reference for this Traditional Chinese Board Games page; in the replay notebook, make the cue do work, this Traditional Chinese Board Games page uses Wikimedia Commons Dou Shou Qi lion piece as a public-library reference because it shows a Dou Shou Qi lion piece reference for animal-rank, trap, and den-route record notes; used as game-material context before the reader checks the article-specific record diagram. The public image helps readers identify materials before the article-specific diagram tests piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry. The page keeps the open reference image contextual rather than exact. This public-library context remains separate from the self-authored article-specific diagram.

Compare
Use the image for board, piece, route, tile, or surface context, then use the article diagram and 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 for the exact composed line.
Keep separate
The public image supports context and license transparency; it is separate from the article-specific record diagram and move sequence.
Keep separateTraditional Chinese Board Games outside-material ruleAncient Chess

When the mistake is tempting, separate habit from proof, all-levels family strategy games readers should read 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4; 2. Cat G6-H7 | Wolf B4-A4 beside camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5. That makes the page an annotated record note, not a tournament score, built as a compact rules-and-record reference. The outside-source job starts only after the local cue treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route is visible. The page-specific mistake check is treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route.

Compare
Use outside material to check animal rank, trap square, river rule, den route, and board-zone vocabulary, source type, and position similarity before returning to the article line.
Keep separate
Keep historic games, named players, or official notation claims only as context checks; this reference note stays an original annotated record example, separate from outside scores, player metadata, and source commentary.
What to compare
  • Notation and turn order: 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4.
  • Position job and trained mistake: a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern / treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route.
  • Image fit, source URL, license label, and whether the public image matches the same game family.
What stays outside
  • Outside scores, player metadata, event labels, table logs, SGF files, and database commentary stay outside the article body.
  • A public image is visual context, not proof that the composed move sequence happened in a real match.
  • A classic position anchor helps comparison; it is not a claim that this page reproduces that exact external record.
Classic lookup cueClassic lookup cue for Traditional Chinese Board GamesAncient Chess: search cue and four comparison checks.

Classic lookup cue for Traditional Chinese Board Games

Use Ancient Chess as a real-record or position lookup context. This page remains an annotated record note and is not a copied tournament score, named-player record, table log, or external database entry.

Search cueAncient Chess: Traditional Chinese Board Games Endgame finishing patterns + board-zone shortcut trap defense rank rule reverses trade rule cue + 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 + treating capture as gain when camp support is real routeOpen Ancient Chess
1Search by position type

Start with board-zone shortcut trap defense rank rule reverses trade rule cue. The goal is to find the same kind of board, tile, route, or threat problem before looking for an exact score.

2Compare notation shape

Use the sample 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4 to compare notation form, move length, and record density against external material.

3Check the trained mistake

Keep this mistake visible while comparing: treating capture as gain when camp support is real route. A useful outside record should make that decision easier to discuss.

4Keep record note and outside record separate

Open Ancient Chess for real records or position context, but keep this record note separate from copied match scores and named-player claims.

Record exemplarCompare the record note with a real source type2 source-backed exemplars for this game family.
Classic position anchorsUse known record shapes before searching for exact scores2 anchors; compare without copying a real score.
Curated reference packWhere to verify the record context2 game-specific references kept separate from the article line.
Comparison pathHow to compare this fragment with external records4 lookup steps; compare, do not copy a real score.

How to compare this fragment with external records

Use this as a reading path before opening external databases or classic-position references. The goal is comparison, not copying a real score into this article.

  1. 1
    Match the notation shape

    Start with Piece-coordinate route notation and the sample 1. Jungle Rat E5-F6 | Dog C4-B4. Compare outside records only for notation shape before judging move quality.

  2. 2
    Anchor the same kind of position

    Use this page cue: a board-zone shortcut, a trap defense, and a rank rule that reverses the trade; one rule cue, one notation line, and one comparison path; camp route E5-I7, trap square near K8, and den approach D5; piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry check for the finishing pattern Look for a similar board, tile, route, or threat problem, not an identical copied position.

  3. 3
    Read it as a reference record note

    Compare record length, annotation density, and the trained mistake: treating a capture as a gain when camp support is the real route. That is how this page explains what a reference record is for.

  4. 4
    Keep record note and outside record separate

    Use Ancient Chess for real record lookup. This page remains an annotated record note and is not a copied tournament score or named-player record.

Reference layerRules checked separately from the record note1 rule source link for notation and boundary checks.

Rules checked separately from the record note

These links support rule vocabulary, notation boundaries, and game-family context. They do not turn this annotated record note into a tournament score or named-player record.

Record contextExternal records stay separate from this record noteAncient Chess: context only, not copied-score proof.

External records stay separate from this record note

Board layout, animal rank, trap, river, and den-entry context for traditional-game annotated records.

Used as a rule and position reference, not as a named historic record corpus. The site's route examples remain composed annotated records.

Dou Shou Qi Position and Rule ContextAncient Chess
Wikimedia Commons Dou Shou Qi lion piece
Traditional Chinese Board GamesWhy this image is here

Public reference: in the replay notebook, make the cue do work, this Traditional Chinese Board Games page uses Wikimedia Commons Dou Shou Qi lion piece as a public-library reference because it shows a Dou Shou Qi lion piece reference for animal-rank, trap, and den-route record notes; used as game-material context before the reader checks the article-specific record diagram. The public image helps readers identify materials before the article-specific diagram tests piece rank, river movement, trap squares, camp support, and den entry. The page keeps the open reference image contextual rather than exact. This public-library context remains separate from the self-authored article-specific diagram. Source: Wikimedia Commons Dou Shou Qi lion piece. License: Wikimedia Commons freely licensed file. Source page. Source file