The Shà Âgi Zushiki (象æÂ¯å³å¼Â), Sho Shà Âgi Zushiki (諸象æÂ¯å³å¼Â), and Shà Âgi Rokushu no Zushiki (象æ£Âå Â種ä¹Âå³å¼Â) are Edo period publications describing various variants of Japanese chess, otherwise known as shà Âgi.
The Shà Âgi Zushiki covers the setup and moves of standard shà Âgi, chà « shà Âgi, dai shà Âgi, tenjiku shà Âgi, dai dai shà Âgi, maka dai dai shà Âgi, and tai shà Âgi. It also mentions wa shà Âgi, Tang shà Âgi (which is seven-person Chinese chess), kà  shà Âgi, and taikyoku shà Âgi.
The Sho Shà Âgi Zushiki (published 1694) covers the setup and moves of sho shà Âgi, standard shà Âgi, wa shà Âgi, chà « shà Âgi, dai shà Âgi, tenjiku shà Âgi, dai dai shà Âgi, maka dai dai shà Âgi, and tai shà Âgi.
The Shà Âgi Rokushu no Zushiki (written 1443, published 1811) covers the setup and moves of sho shà Âgi, chà « shà Âgi, dai shà Âgi, dai dai shà Âgi, maka dai dai shà Âgi, and tai shà Âgi.
The Shà Âgi Zushiki and Sho Shà Âgi Zushiki are generally though not always in agreement on the powers of the various pieces, but the Shà Âgi Rokushu no Zushiki differs in the descriptions of most pieces which are found only in the larger shogi variants, or which have distinctive moves in the larger variants.