Sanankou: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
put compatability in a 2= section, for consistentcy
mNo edit summary
(put compatability in a 2= section, for consistentcy)
Line 35: Line 35:
This yaku requires three closed [[Mentsu#Koutsu|triplets]], as it is defined as such. This leaves room for one [[Naki|tile call]], which can be of any [[mentsu|tile group]].
This yaku requires three closed [[Mentsu#Koutsu|triplets]], as it is defined as such. This leaves room for one [[Naki|tile call]], which can be of any [[mentsu|tile group]].


=== Compatibility ===
=== Suuankou tenpai ===
A closed tenpai hand with both sanankou and [[toitoi]] is tenpai for [[suuankou]].  When this hand wins by discard, then the hand is not counted as suuankou.  Instead, it is the combination of sanankou and toitoi.  The fourth triplet completed by the discarded tile counts as an "open triplet", rather than a fourth closed one.
 
== Compatibility ==
{{main|Yaku compatibility}}
{{main|Yaku compatibility}}


Line 42: Line 45:
Sanankou is incompatible with any yaku requiring more than one sequence, namely [[pinfu]], [[iipeikou]], [[ittsu]], [[sanshoku]], and [[ryanpeikou]]. It is incompatible with [[chiitoitsu]], which requires no [[mentsu]] at all.
Sanankou is incompatible with any yaku requiring more than one sequence, namely [[pinfu]], [[iipeikou]], [[ittsu]], [[sanshoku]], and [[ryanpeikou]]. It is incompatible with [[chiitoitsu]], which requires no [[mentsu]] at all.


A natural combination involves [[toitoi]]. With one tile call, the hand needs to win by tsumo; otherwise by ron, only toitoi is counted. This premise is a similar case involving suuankou, which counts as yakuman via tsumo.  Otherwise, it may not.
A natural combination involves [[toitoi]]. With one tile call, the hand needs to win by tsumo; otherwise by ron, only toitoi is counted. This premise is a similar case involving suuankou, which counts as yakuman via tsumo, or sanankou if ron.
 
=== Suuankou tenpai ===
A closed tenpai hand with both sanankou and [[toitoi]] is tenpai for [[suuankou]].  When this hand wins by discard, then the hand is not counted as suuankou.  Instead, it is the combination of sanankou and toitoi.  The fourth triplet completed by the discarded tile counts as an "open triplet", rather than a fourth closed one.


==External links==
==External links==
1,758

edits

Navigation menu