User:鳥星雨: Difference between revisions

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==Playing Style==
==Playing Style==
鳥星雨 has a more defensive play-style, and usually folds his hands when he is in the lead. As a result, his average hand win rate (和了率 - Houra ritsu), is on the lower side at [https://image.ibb.co/iNPBcz/IMG_1343.jpg 21.6%]. 鳥星雨 is a Menzen-type player who rarely calls, highlighted by his very below average (副露率 - Fuuro ritsu) at '''25.9%'''. Despite this, 鳥星雨 does not call [[Riichi]] as often and prefers to stay [[Damaten]] most of the time, indicated by his low Riichi rate (立直率 - Riichi ritsu) of '''18.1%'''. 鳥星雨 stated that he "plays like super well when he is ahead", but is "absolutely terrible when behind" and needs a gyakuten. (Note that this is as of 9-05-18, and credit goes to Tina for her [https://dfwriichi.wordpress.com/2018/06/13/tinas-tactics-3-knowing-your-play-style/ article] on how to interpret Tenhou stats).
鳥星雨 plays a slow and methodical, conservative playstyle. He focuses heavily on probability maximization as a key towards winning hands. Therefore, he relies very heavily on ryanmen and sanmenchan waits, which results in him going for the yaku [[Pinfu]] in a plurality of his hands. 鳥星雨 rarely calls tiles, and prefers to keep his hand closed. This is because he greatly values the ability to play defensively if the situation requires it. 鳥星雨 will rarely call Riichi on a poor wait, and will often times sacrifice tenpai to search for a better one, even without a valid yaku in his hand. All of this results in rather slow gameplay, leading to lower hand winrates in general.
 
However, 鳥星雨's specialty is defensive play. When he is ahead, he is excellent at holding onto leads. Like any good defensive player, he properly understands when to fold, and how to do so. However, his unique skill, and simultaneously his favorite play, is to deny opposing players' chances of a comeback by pushing and winning his own hands after an opposing Riichi call.
 
Inspired by club leaders at Waseda University, 鳥星雨 has practiced discard reading to push seemingly dangerous tiles under an opposing Riichi call and steal some wins from other players. His favorite strategy is to push hands that win off of the Riichi player's genbutsu tiles, picking off points from other players who are attempting to fold. He takes advantage of the fact that a call for Riichi not only eliminates entirely the calling player's ability to defend, but also tends to elicit folds from the remaining players. This way, he not only gains points, but crucially denies opportunities for comeback wins and gyakutens.
 
鳥星雨's biggest weakness is aggressive play involving fast tenpai hands. This is because of his unwillingness to call, even when it may be better to do so. This is most evident when he plays with beginners, or in the 一般 lobby of Tenhou, where although he doesn't deal in, he loses simply due to other players being faster in hitting the beginner level players. Thus, he very much dislikes playing games with beginner level players, and prefers to play with 特上 level players or better.
 
That said, 鳥星雨 ultimately recognizes he is still an amateur player and has much room to improve. He is a player that has more fun losing to skilled players than beating beginner players. Thus, he always welcomes a challenge, and looks forward to playing as many skilled players as often as he can. He hopes you will oblige him by contacting him, or connecting with his club at [[Northwestern University Riichi Mahjong]].


==Yakuman Count==
==Yakuman Count==

Revision as of 18:04, 6 September 2018

鳥星雨

Himeko x Mairu
Full name 鳥星雨
Country South Korea
Club Northwestern University Riichi Mahjong
ID 鳥星雨

Northwestern University Riichi Mahjong admin. For all NURM inquiries, please contact me below.

Contact Information

Mahjong Biography

鳥星雨 (ちょうせいう or とりせいう) is an amateur Riichi Mahjong player who currently administers the Northwestern University Riichi Mahjong (NURM) club, based in Evanston, IL, USA. He founded the club in April of 2018, and continues to play a large role in the management of the club, despite his graduation and employment overseas. An alumnus of Northwestern University and of Waseda University, 鳥星雨 has connections with both the North American scene and the Japanese scene. He currently resides in Suwon, South Korea.

鳥星雨 plays as 鳥星雨 on Tenhou, where he shares a healthy rivalry with his fellow clubmate and close friend YuukiTheFlash. He is also a former regular club member at Chicago Area Mahjong and Waseda Mahjong Club. He still often plays on Tenhou with members from his former clubs, and runs the NURM weekly Friday night Tenhou meetings, hosted within the club's Discord Server.

His favorite Saki character is Tsuruta Himeko.

Tournament Play

鳥星雨 has not yet competed in an official Riichi Mahjong Tournament.

Tenhou.net Aliases

4-Player Ranked Statistics

Name Tenhou Rank Games First Game Last Game Rank Avg Best Worst Avg Score Sources
鳥星雨 (二段 r1549) 144 04-03-2018 08-27-2018 2.55 +71 -89 -2.77 [1][2]

Milestones

  • 9級
04-03-2018
  • 8級
04-03-2018
  • 7級
04-03-2018
  • 6級
04-04-2018
  • 5級
04-04-2018
  • 4級
04-05-2018
  • 3級
04-06-2018
  • 2級
04-13-2018
  • 1級
04-17-2018
  • 初段
04-22-2018
  • 二段
06-22-2018

Playing Style

鳥星雨 plays a slow and methodical, conservative playstyle. He focuses heavily on probability maximization as a key towards winning hands. Therefore, he relies very heavily on ryanmen and sanmenchan waits, which results in him going for the yaku Pinfu in a plurality of his hands. 鳥星雨 rarely calls tiles, and prefers to keep his hand closed. This is because he greatly values the ability to play defensively if the situation requires it. 鳥星雨 will rarely call Riichi on a poor wait, and will often times sacrifice tenpai to search for a better one, even without a valid yaku in his hand. All of this results in rather slow gameplay, leading to lower hand winrates in general.

However, 鳥星雨's specialty is defensive play. When he is ahead, he is excellent at holding onto leads. Like any good defensive player, he properly understands when to fold, and how to do so. However, his unique skill, and simultaneously his favorite play, is to deny opposing players' chances of a comeback by pushing and winning his own hands after an opposing Riichi call.

Inspired by club leaders at Waseda University, 鳥星雨 has practiced discard reading to push seemingly dangerous tiles under an opposing Riichi call and steal some wins from other players. His favorite strategy is to push hands that win off of the Riichi player's genbutsu tiles, picking off points from other players who are attempting to fold. He takes advantage of the fact that a call for Riichi not only eliminates entirely the calling player's ability to defend, but also tends to elicit folds from the remaining players. This way, he not only gains points, but crucially denies opportunities for comeback wins and gyakutens.

鳥星雨's biggest weakness is aggressive play involving fast tenpai hands. This is because of his unwillingness to call, even when it may be better to do so. This is most evident when he plays with beginners, or in the 一般 lobby of Tenhou, where although he doesn't deal in, he loses simply due to other players being faster in hitting the beginner level players. Thus, he very much dislikes playing games with beginner level players, and prefers to play with 特上 level players or better.

That said, 鳥星雨 ultimately recognizes he is still an amateur player and has much room to improve. He is a player that has more fun losing to skilled players than beating beginner players. Thus, he always welcomes a challenge, and looks forward to playing as many skilled players as often as he can. He hopes you will oblige him by contacting him, or connecting with his club at Northwestern University Riichi Mahjong.

Yakuman Count

Real Tiles

Date Yakuman Location Notes Source
07-03-2018 国士無双 Waseda Mahjong Club
Ron:

Kokushi Musou scored by houtei ron on the Hatsu. Haipai had 8 unique terminal/honor tiles. A 42.1k first place lead was acquired by South 4 Oorasu. The initial plan was to attempt a Chanta, but gradually a yakuman became a possibility. Although isshanten was achieved waiting on the East and Hatsu, a pon of Hatsu was called, and a third East tile was discarded. However, the second to last draw found the fourth and final East tile. A show of tenpai at ryuukyoku was at this point expected, but second place kamicha at 33.8k found the last Hatsu tile on the final draw, and pushed tenpai. The final score was a first place 74.1k.

[3]