Although in an actual game if they learned the rules, why do I get this feeling that Warspite or Richelieu might get near-bullshit yakus with their tactics, Gangut will snag something like winning through low scoring eventually and Bismarck's gonna predict the thrown tiles to her advantage
Although in an actual game if they learned the rules, why do I get this feeling that Warspite or Richelieu might get near-bullshit yakus with their tactics, Gangut will snag something like winning through low scoring eventually and Bismarck's gonna predict the thrown tiles to her advantage
Bismarck will definitely lose (heavily) in the end just so she can get the bunker scene.
With all the regional variants of mah jong out there, it wouldn't surprise me if this was just the European version.
While there is a European Mahjong Association (they have very handy and easy-to-read reference materials!), Euro mahjong is basically either Chinese or Japanese (with some variation, but nothing drastic); Italy is even hosting the 2019 Mahjong World Championships! (Played with tournament rules, based off Chinese mahjong.)
The one that is drastically different (5 and 6-tile runs!)is the American variant, which is stereotypically played by Jewish housewives (and mothers).
Aliasoddity said:
Gangut: And now I have become the undefeated of the East North South West and Center! I have become Super Russia!
While there is a European Mahjong Association (they have very handy and easy-to-read reference materials!), Euro mahjong is basically either Chinese or Japanese (with some variation, but nothing drastic); Italy is even hosting the 2019 Mahjong World Championships! (Played with tournament rules, based off Chinese mahjong.)
A long time ago, 3 of my friends and I tried to play mah jong, and we soon discovered that each of us knew a different set of rules and scoring. We didn't get through the first hand before it devolved into an argument over whether the person's hand was a legitimate winning hand, and if it was, how it should be scored, how paying out worked, etc. No consensus was reached.
And I seem to recall that one person did think it was okay to pick up discarded tiles and hold them in your hand, like in gin rummy. So while it wasn't quite on Gangut's level...
And I think one person didn't build walls when they usually played.
So yeah, some people play with (from my perspective) pretty weird regional/house rules.
Did anyone know there's a Kancolle Mahjong series? It's a video series on Niconico, by the author of the TAS Marisa series.
Foreign Ship Gag Manga BiyoriThe foreign ships, playing mahjong. (Nobody knows the rules.)RON!!The tile I'm taking is upside-down!?W-Whaaaaaat!?What should I do!?Heheheh...Kuku... what a pity.Not knowing how to deal with this, she regretfully passes.
You cannot pass in mahjong.Warspite continued to pass afterwards.
You cannot pass in mahjong. It's important, so I said it twice.Heheh... and that's my win!
agari - the call for a winning hand, either ron (winning off another player) or tsumo (winning off a self-drawn tile)POW!Geh... I'll pass for now...East-West-South-North, and also the middle!
I've collected all the directions!This is not a hand; winds can be a hand, but only the round's or your seat's winds are able to be won on, unless you have either 3 sets of the winds plus a pair (i.e. either 3 or 4 of E/W/S and 2 N); or a full set of each wind. This is one of the highest-scoring hands possible in Japanese mahjong.
Further, what Richlieu called the winds is incorrect, both in order and pronunciation - Japanese mahjong uses east-south-west-north, read as ton-nan-shaa-pei (from the Chinese). In a similar vein, while the red dragon tile is referered to as 'middle', which is what the kanji on it is, it's called chun, not naka (or chuu.)Why is like that only where I am...?It's possible that Warspite is only drawing from the tiles in front of her, and that she has the 'dead wall', which has both the tiles taken for 4 of a kind sets (kan) as well as tiles that will never be played. The upside-down tile is a dora indicator, showing that the following tile in the suit is worth one han (point multiplier), but cannot be used to win with on its own. An additional tile is flipped if a player declares a kan; and the tiles under each dora tile (the ura-dora)are also used if a player goes into riichi, where a player forgoes the ability to alter their hand for one extra han and the chance to get the ura-dora.Ach! There's nothing on here... it's a blank!While a plain white tile can be a blank, it can also be the white dragon (some sets put a black border on the dragon tile to differentiate it from actual blanks)Relentlessly grabbing people's discards, Gangut's tiles now number 32.
Firstly, you can only take tiles to complete sets, not just in general (3/4 of a kind from anyone, a run only from the previous player, unless for a win), which you also have to open to the table and put to the side; secondly, a hand is only 13 tiles, with the 14th being either for a win or discarded.