An Entity of Type: software, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

Saikyō Habu Shōgi (Japanese: 最強羽生将棋, lit. Strongest Habu Shogi) is a Japanese virtual board game for the Nintendo 64 developed and published by Seta. It was released exclusively in Japan on June 23, 1996, as one of the Nintendo 64's three Japanese launch games alongside Super Mario 64 and Pilotwings 64. It was the only launch game to use the Controller Pak. The game's "special guest" is the shogi player Yoshiharu Habu, who won all seven major shogi championships the year of the game's release. Though it was anticipated that the game would be a bestseller and a major showcase for the Nintendo 64's processing power, sales were not high, with only about one copy accompanying every one hundred consoles sold at the system launch. Seta released an indirect sequel for the Nintendo 64 titled Morit

Property Value
dbo:abstract
  • Saikyō Habu Shōgi (Japanese: 最強羽生将棋, lit. Strongest Habu Shogi) is a Japanese virtual board game for the Nintendo 64 developed and published by Seta. It was released exclusively in Japan on June 23, 1996, as one of the Nintendo 64's three Japanese launch games alongside Super Mario 64 and Pilotwings 64. It was the only launch game to use the Controller Pak. The game's "special guest" is the shogi player Yoshiharu Habu, who won all seven major shogi championships the year of the game's release. Though it was anticipated that the game would be a bestseller and a major showcase for the Nintendo 64's processing power, sales were not high, with only about one copy accompanying every one hundred consoles sold at the system launch. Seta released an indirect sequel for the Nintendo 64 titled Morita Shogi 64 as part of the Morita Shogi series, which was announced at Nintendo Space World in 1996, and later a direct sequel Kosagawa Shogi for the PlayStation 2. (en)
  • Saikyō Habu Shōgi (最強羽生将棋) est un jeu vidéo de shōgi sorti en 1996 sur Nintendo 64 uniquement au Japon. Le jeu a été développé et édité par Seta. Le jeu met en vedette le joueur de shōgi Yoshiharu Habu. Il est l'un des trois titres de lancement de la Nintendo 64 au Japon. (fr)
  • 『最強羽生将棋』(さいきょうはぶしょうぎ)は、1996年6月23日にセタより発売されたNINTENDO64用の将棋ソフト。ハードと同時に発売された3本のローンチソフトのうちの一つ。 日本将棋連盟推薦。通常の対局はもちろんのこと、初心者教室や、自由研究、羽生善治名人(当時)の棋譜も収録。思考ルーチンは金沢伸一郎が開発。続編に、PlayStation 2用の『』がある。 このゲームでは、禁じ手を指すことは出来ないようになっているが、敵陣2段目に持ち駒の桂馬を打っても禁じ手にならず、普通に着手できてしまうという問題点がある。 本作には将棋ソフトとしては珍しく『「最強羽生将棋」完全攻略活用ブック―佐島家の野望』(小田切秀人著、日本将棋連盟)という攻略本も存在し、実力試験「次の一手」と詰将棋の解答などが記載されている。 (ja)
dbo:computingPlatform
dbo:developer
dbo:genre
dbo:publisher
dbo:releaseDate
  • 1996-06-23 (xsd:date)
dbo:thumbnail
dbo:wikiPageID
  • 6294730 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength
  • 3455 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
  • 1117837540 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbp:developer
dbp:genre
dbp:modes
dbp:platforms
dbp:publisher
  • Seta (en)
dbp:released
  • 0001-06-23 (xsd:gMonthDay)
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dcterms:subject
gold:hypernym
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • Saikyō Habu Shōgi (最強羽生将棋) est un jeu vidéo de shōgi sorti en 1996 sur Nintendo 64 uniquement au Japon. Le jeu a été développé et édité par Seta. Le jeu met en vedette le joueur de shōgi Yoshiharu Habu. Il est l'un des trois titres de lancement de la Nintendo 64 au Japon. (fr)
  • 『最強羽生将棋』(さいきょうはぶしょうぎ)は、1996年6月23日にセタより発売されたNINTENDO64用の将棋ソフト。ハードと同時に発売された3本のローンチソフトのうちの一つ。 日本将棋連盟推薦。通常の対局はもちろんのこと、初心者教室や、自由研究、羽生善治名人(当時)の棋譜も収録。思考ルーチンは金沢伸一郎が開発。続編に、PlayStation 2用の『』がある。 このゲームでは、禁じ手を指すことは出来ないようになっているが、敵陣2段目に持ち駒の桂馬を打っても禁じ手にならず、普通に着手できてしまうという問題点がある。 本作には将棋ソフトとしては珍しく『「最強羽生将棋」完全攻略活用ブック―佐島家の野望』(小田切秀人著、日本将棋連盟)という攻略本も存在し、実力試験「次の一手」と詰将棋の解答などが記載されている。 (ja)
  • Saikyō Habu Shōgi (Japanese: 最強羽生将棋, lit. Strongest Habu Shogi) is a Japanese virtual board game for the Nintendo 64 developed and published by Seta. It was released exclusively in Japan on June 23, 1996, as one of the Nintendo 64's three Japanese launch games alongside Super Mario 64 and Pilotwings 64. It was the only launch game to use the Controller Pak. The game's "special guest" is the shogi player Yoshiharu Habu, who won all seven major shogi championships the year of the game's release. Though it was anticipated that the game would be a bestseller and a major showcase for the Nintendo 64's processing power, sales were not high, with only about one copy accompanying every one hundred consoles sold at the system launch. Seta released an indirect sequel for the Nintendo 64 titled Morit (en)
rdfs:label
  • Saikyō Habu Shōgi (fr)
  • 最強羽生将棋 (ja)
  • Saikyō Habu Shōgi (en)
owl:sameAs
prov:wasDerivedFrom
foaf:depiction
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of
is foaf:primaryTopic of
Powered by OpenLink Virtuoso    This material is Open Knowledge     W3C Semantic Web Technology     This material is Open Knowledge    Valid XHTML + RDFa
This content was extracted from Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License