292
edits
m (applying consistent footnote style) |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:Dora and Wanpai.jpg|thumb|350px|Dead wall (with topmost tile of the first column set aside) showing 2-pin as the dora indicator.]]'''Dora''' {{kana|ドラ}} | [[Image:Dora and Wanpai.jpg|thumb|350px|Dead wall (with topmost tile of the first column set aside) showing 2-pin as the dora indicator.]]'''Dora''' {{kana|ドラ}}{{note|The term dora is an abbreviation of the English word dragon, which is pronounced ''doragon'' in Japanese. Dora tiles are not to be confused with the [[sangenpai]], which are called dragon tiles in English mahjong terminology, despite them having no association with dragons in Japan and China.}} are special tiles; each dora in your hand grants 1 [[han]]. However, '''hands still require at least one [[yaku]] in order to score'''. Dora do not count towards the yaku requirement, so they are best considered as a bonus. | ||
At the beginning of every hand, fourteen tiles are set aside as the dead wall tiles. A tile in the dead wall is flipped over, and the tile numerically after the flipped tile is the dora. For example, if 2-pin is flipped over, then 3-pin is the dora itself. Additional dora may be revealed through [[kan]], known as '''kandora'''. Also, hands that declare [[riichi]] may score extra '''uradora'''. | At the beginning of every hand, fourteen tiles are set aside as the dead wall tiles. A tile in the dead wall is flipped over, and the tile numerically after the flipped tile is the dora. For example, if 2-pin is flipped over, then 3-pin is the dora itself. Additional dora may be revealed through [[kan]], known as '''kandora'''. Also, hands that declare [[riichi]] may score extra '''uradora'''. | ||
Line 98: | Line 98: | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
{{ | {{notes}} | ||
==External links== | ==External links== |
edits