Ari-ari: Difference between revisions
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'''Ari-ari''' {{kana|アリ アリ}} refers to a ruleset which allows [[kuitan]] (open [[tanyao]]) and allows [[atozuke]] (winning without confirmed yaku). It is | '''Ari-ari''' {{kana|アリ アリ}} refers to a ruleset which allows [[kuitan]] (open [[tanyao]]) and allows [[atozuke]] (winning without confirmed yaku). It is the most common [[Rule variations|ruleset]] of modern [[Japanese mahjong]]. | ||
Conversely, '''nashi-nashi''' forbids kuitan and atozuke. Nashi-ari would forbid kuitan but allow atozuke, and vice versa for ari-nashi. | Conversely, '''nashi-nashi''' forbids kuitan and atozuke. Nashi-ari would forbid kuitan but allow atozuke, and vice versa for ari-nashi. | ||
== Game settings == | == Game settings == | ||
In addition to kuitan - Ari and atozuke - Ari, the following settings are often used in "Ari-Ari" rulesets: | |||
* [[Agariyame]] - Nashi | * [[Agariyame]] - Nashi | ||
* [[Atamahane]] - Nashi | * [[Atamahane]] - Nashi | ||
* [[Kuikae]] - Nashi | * [[Kuikae]] - Nashi | ||
* [[Tobi]] - Ari | * [[Tobi]] - Ari | ||
Latest revision as of 17:17, 10 August 2024
Ari-ari 「アリ アリ」 refers to a ruleset which allows kuitan (open tanyao) and allows atozuke (winning without confirmed yaku). It is the most common ruleset of modern Japanese mahjong.
Conversely, nashi-nashi forbids kuitan and atozuke. Nashi-ari would forbid kuitan but allow atozuke, and vice versa for ari-nashi.
Game settings
In addition to kuitan - Ari and atozuke - Ari, the following settings are often used in "Ari-Ari" rulesets: