Stop memorizing move orders you don’t understand. Learn the aim behind each move, and the joseki will remember itself.
A joseki (定跡) is a standard opening sequence that both sides have agreed, over decades of play, leads to a fair fight. Knowing joseki saves you from losing in the first 20 moves to theory you’d never seen. But there’s a trap: memorizing the moves without understanding the reasons. That player wins when the opponent follows the book — and collapses the moment they don’t.
This guide is about studying joseki the right way.
The Golden Rule: Learn the Aim, Not the Order
Every joseki move answers a question. Before you memorize a sequence, make sure you can say why each move is played:
- Is this move developing a piece toward the fight?
- Is it defending against a specific threat?
- Is it preparing a pawn break or an attack?
- Is it gaining tempo or provoking a weakness?
If you can answer that for every move, you’ve actually learned the joseki. If you can’t, you’ve memorized a phone number.
Which Joseki Should You Learn First?
Don’t try to learn “all joseki.” Learn the joseki of your one repertoire opening (see Building a Repertoire), plus one universal attacking pattern.
Climbing Silver (棒銀, Bōgin) — the must-know attacking joseki. A silver marches up the rook’s file to break through. It appears in many openings, and learning it teaches you how an attack is actually built.
Fourth File Rook vs Rushes (四間飛車対急戦) — if you play Ranging Rook, this is your bread and butter: how to meet an early Static Rook attack.
Your opening’s main line — whatever you chose, learn its single most common continuation deeply before branching out.
A 4-Step Method to Study Any Joseki
- Play it through slowly on a board, saying the aim of each move out loud.
- Find the “branch points.” Most joseki have 2–3 moments where the opponent can deviate. Note what each deviation tries to do.
- Learn the punishment. For each common deviation, know the one move that refutes or neutralizes it. This is where joseki knowledge actually wins games.
- Reach the “joseki end” and keep going. A joseki ends in a playable middlegame, not a win. Make sure you know what your plan is from there.
Joseki and Game Review Go Together
The fastest way to find which joseki to study is to review your own losses. When an opponent’s opening confused you, that’s the joseki to learn next. Use the method in How to Analyze Your Own Games, then come back here and study the line that beat you.
Keep Going
- Building a Shogi Opening Repertoire
- How to Analyze Your Own Games
- Essential tesuji (coming soon)
🇯🇵 日本語版: 覚える価値のある定跡と、その学び方
