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  2. Japanese mahjong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_mahjong

    Japanese mahjong tiles, including red dora tiles as well as season tiles which are used in variants. Japanese mahjong is usually played with 136 tiles. [7] The tiles are mixed and then arranged into four walls that are each two stacked tiles high and 17 tiles wide. 26 of the stacks are used to build the players' starting hands, 7 stacks are used to form a dead wall, and the remaining 35 stacks ...

  3. Japanese mahjong yaku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_mahjong_yaku

    A hand containing only pure-green tiles. This is exclusively the bamboo tiles of 2, 3, 4, 6 and 8, as well as the green dragon tiles. Many of the Japanese tile-sets color these specific tiles with just green, while all other tiles use another color (including the bamboo tiles of 1, 5, 7, and 9, which have red on them).

  4. Japanese mahjong scoring rules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_Mahjong_scoring_rules

    The only 20 fu hands are the no-points hand (pinfu, 平和) where the winning tile is self-drawn. However, since a no-points hand must be closed, it makes winning via a self-drawn tile automatically add 1 han yaku of self pick to the hand. Therefore, a 1 han 20 fu hand cannot exist. A seven pairs hand is fixed at 25 fu.

  5. Mahjong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahjong

    Three player mahjong (or 3-ka) is a simplified three-person mahjong that involves hands of 13 tiles (with a total of 84 tiles on the table) and may use jokers depending on the variation. Any rule set can be adapted for three players; however, this is far more common and accepted in Japan, Korea, Malaysia and the Philippines.

  6. Scoring in Mahjong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scoring_in_Mahjong

    While the basic gameplay is more or less the same throughout mahjong, the most significant divergence between variations lies in the scoring systems. Like the gameplay, there is a generalized system of scoring, based on the method of winning and the winning hand, from which Chinese and Japanese (among notable systems) base their roots.

  7. Mahjong tiles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahjong_tiles

    Mahjong tiles (Chinese: 麻將牌 or 麻雀牌; pinyin: májiàngpái; Cantonese Jyutping: maa 4 zoek 3 paai 2; Japanese: 麻雀牌; rōmaji: mājanpai) are tiles of Chinese origin that are used to play mahjong as well as mahjong solitaire and other games.

  8. Three player mahjong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_player_mahjong

    In some variations these are not allowed. Only pongs and kongs in three-player games can be melded (or declared) meaning a chow can only be formed by a discard on winning. [10] In Korean mahjong, three-player Japanese mahjong and in Korean/Japanese mahjong, melded chows are never allowed except if done to complete a hand.

  9. Mudazumo Naki Kaikaku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mudazumo_Naki_Kaikaku

    He came to Japan to play mahjong with the members of the Japanese Diet as part of a Russo-Japanese Summit, sending Japan into massive debt with his winning streak. Special moves include " Kolkhoz Riichi" and the " Baltic Fleet " ( Four quads of bamboo tiles, worth 1,583,296,743,997,800 points in total because they were playing without point ...