Ryantan: Difference between revisions

From Japanese Mahjong Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (mention tanki creates more fu)
mNo edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 10: Line 10:
'''Ryantan''' {{kana|リャンタン}}, '''kantan''', and '''pentan''' {{kana|ペンタン}} are a group of [[complex waits]] that can wait to complete either a pair or a sequence. They appear as a triplet with a nearby adjacent tile:
'''Ryantan''' {{kana|リャンタン}}, '''kantan''', and '''pentan''' {{kana|ペンタン}} are a group of [[complex waits]] that can wait to complete either a pair or a sequence. They appear as a triplet with a nearby adjacent tile:


* '''Ryantan''': Combination of [[ryanmen]] and [[tanki]]. Involves a triplet with a tile adjacent, where none of these tiles are [[terminal]]s. Example: 2223, which can be treated as 22 + 23 (ryanmen) or 222 + 3 (tanki).
* '''Ryantan''' ([[ryanmen]] + [[tanki]]): Appears as a triplet with a tile adjacent, where none of these tiles are [[terminal]]s. Example: 2223, which can be treated as 22 + 23 (ryanmen) or 222 + 3 (tanki).
* '''Kantan''': Combination of [[kanchan]] and [[tanki]]. Involves a triplet with a tile numerically 2 apart. Example: 2224, which can be treated as 222 + 24 (kanchan) or 222 + 4 (tanki).
* '''Kantan''' ([[kanchan]] + tanki): Appears as a triplet with a tile numerically 2 apart. Example: 2224, which can be treated as 222 + 24 (kanchan) or 222 + 4 (tanki).
* '''Pentan''': Combination of [[penchan]] and [[tanki]]. Involves a triplet with a tile adjacent, where either the triplet or adjacent tile are composed of terminals. Examples: 1112, which can be treated as 111 + 12 (penchan) or 111 + 2 (tanki).
* '''Pentan''' ([[penchan]] + tanki): Appears as a triplet with a tile adjacent, where either the triplet or adjacent tile are composed of terminals. Examples: 1112, which can be treated as 111 + 12 (penchan) or 111 + 2 (tanki).


In order to enter [[tenpai]] with any of these waits, the hand must not have any other pairs. If it already has a "stable" pair, the adjacent tile can be treated as a floating tile.
In order to enter [[tenpai]] with any of these waits, the hand must not have any other pairs. If it already has a "stable" pair, the adjacent tile can be treated as a floating tile.
Line 24: Line 24:


===Kantan===
===Kantan===
{{#mjt:1113m000000000z}} Waiting for: {{#mjt:2m}} or {{#mjt:3m}}
{{#mjt:123456789m1113s}} Waiting for: {{#mjt:2s}} or {{#mjt:3s}}


===Pentan===
===Pentan===
Line 44: Line 44:


==Value==
==Value==
Kantan and pentan are always worth 2 fu, so they cannot be used for pinfu. Completing the tanki is worth more fu, since it forms a triplet.
Kantan and pentan are always worth 2 [[fu]], so they cannot be used for pinfu. Completing the tanki is worth more fu, since it forms a triplet.


Ryantan is worth fu only if it completes the tanki portion. If it completes the ryanmen, no fu is scored, so it can be used for pinfu. E.g. a hand with a 4445 wait can score pinfu when winning with 3 or 6, but ''not'' with the 5.
Ryantan is worth fu only if it completes the tanki portion. If it completes the ryanmen, no fu is scored, so it can be used for pinfu. E.g. a hand with a 4445 wait can score pinfu when winning with 3 or 6, but ''not'' with the 5.

Latest revision as of 05:36, 28 November 2024

Ryantan
Kanji リャンタン
ペンタン
Fu Dependent
Tile types waiting 3 or 2 sided wait
Tiles available 11 or 7 tiles
Pattern example

Ryantan 「リャンタン」, kantan, and pentan 「ペンタン」 are a group of complex waits that can wait to complete either a pair or a sequence. They appear as a triplet with a nearby adjacent tile:

  • Ryantan (ryanmen + tanki): Appears as a triplet with a tile adjacent, where none of these tiles are terminals. Example: 2223, which can be treated as 22 + 23 (ryanmen) or 222 + 3 (tanki).
  • Kantan (kanchan + tanki): Appears as a triplet with a tile numerically 2 apart. Example: 2224, which can be treated as 222 + 24 (kanchan) or 222 + 4 (tanki).
  • Pentan (penchan + tanki): Appears as a triplet with a tile adjacent, where either the triplet or adjacent tile are composed of terminals. Examples: 1112, which can be treated as 111 + 12 (penchan) or 111 + 2 (tanki).

In order to enter tenpai with any of these waits, the hand must not have any other pairs. If it already has a "stable" pair, the adjacent tile can be treated as a floating tile.

Pattern

Ryantan

Waiting for: , ,

Note: this hand will score pinfu if won on or . If won on the , the hand will have a triplet, thus invalidating the yaku.

Kantan

Waiting for: or

Pentan

Waiting for: ,

Waiting for: ,

Tatsumaki

Tatsumaki can be viewed as two ryantan waits fused together. It consists of two triplets that are 2 ranks apart, and one floating tile between the triplets.

Waiting for:

Note: when this pattern wins on either triplet tile (in this example, or ), the hand can complete a shanpon wait instead of a ryanmen wait. This can be important as the shanpon wait gives more fu, and possibly gives sanankou.

Value

Kantan and pentan are always worth 2 fu, so they cannot be used for pinfu. Completing the tanki is worth more fu, since it forms a triplet.

Ryantan is worth fu only if it completes the tanki portion. If it completes the ryanmen, no fu is scored, so it can be used for pinfu. E.g. a hand with a 4445 wait can score pinfu when winning with 3 or 6, but not with the 5.

External links