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A hand can technically gain points with [[dora]] tiles. But if a hand has only dora tiles, and no yaku, it still can't win. | A hand can technically gain points with [[dora]] tiles. But if a hand has only dora tiles, and no yaku, it still can't win. | ||
More yaku will be covered later in the guide. | |||
===Riichi=== | |||
The simplest yaku is [[riichi]]. So long as you have not called an opponent's discarded tile (you haven't done "[[chii]]", "[[pon]]", and haven't pressed "[[kan]]" when it's not your turn), you may declare riichi when you have a ready hand. Riichi comes with a few stipulations: | |||
* Riichi announces that you have a ready hand to other players. | |||
* Calling riichi costs 1000 points. The first player to win will claim these 1000 points (if you win with your own riichi, you get the 1000 points back). | |||
* Once you declare riichi, you cannot change your hand. You must discard what you draw, unless you draw your winning tile. | |||
==Furiten== | ==Furiten== | ||
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==Scoring== | ==Scoring== | ||
{{Main|Scoring}} | {{Main|Scoring}} | ||
The scoring system is very complex. New players should not worry about the scoring table, instead focusing on making a winning hands. | The scoring system is very complex. New players should not worry about the scoring table, instead focusing on making a winning hands. When playing online, the computer will score hands for you, so there's no need to worry about scoring as an absolute beginner. | ||
Here is how the scoring system works. | Here is how the scoring system works. |
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