Ryanpeikou: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m (→With chinitsu) |
m (→With chinitsu) |
||
Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
===With chinitsu=== | ===With chinitsu=== | ||
Some forms of ryanpeikou mixed with [[chinitsu]] and [[tanyao]] may actually form some optional yakuman, named daisharin, daichikurin, and daisuurin. | Some forms of ryanpeikou mixed with [[chinitsu]] and [[tanyao]] may actually form some optional yakuman, named daisharin (pinzu), daichikurin (souzu), and daisuurin (manzu). | ||
:{{#mjt:2233445566778s}} Agari: {{#mjt:2s}}, {{#mjt:5s}}, or {{#mjt:8s}} | :{{#mjt:2233445566778s}} Agari: {{#mjt:2s}}, {{#mjt:5s}}, or {{#mjt:8s}} |
Revision as of 09:30, 29 September 2013
Type | Yaku |
---|---|
Kanji | 二盃口 |
English | Two sets of identical sequences |
Value | 3 han (closed only) |
Speed | Very slow |
Difficulty | Very hard |
Ryanpeikou (二盃口) is a standard yaku, consisting of two "iipeikou". The prefix "ryan" is a Japanese counter for mahjong, signifying for "two".
Tile pattern
Chii toitsu
This yaku does not combine with chii toitsu. By defition, chii toitsu is formed by the collection of seven pairs. Although, ryanpeikou may be interpreted as a collection of seven pairs also. However, ryanpeikou is actually composed of sequences, rather than as independent pairs.
Formation
With chinitsu
Some forms of ryanpeikou mixed with chinitsu and tanyao may actually form some optional yakuman, named daisharin (pinzu), daichikurin (souzu), and daisuurin (manzu).
Value
External links
- Ryanpeikou in Japanese Wikipedia
|