Menzenchin tsumohou: Difference between revisions
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With this yaku, all closed hands qualify for menzen tsumo. In fact, a closed hand may instantly win by self draw, even when it is the only yaku for the hand. | With this yaku, all closed hands qualify for menzen tsumo. In fact, a closed hand may instantly win by self draw, even when it is the only yaku for the hand. | ||
No open hand may qualify for this yaku. | No open hand may qualify for this yaku. The instant a player [[Naki|calls on a discarded tile]], then the player forfeits the right to declare this yaku until the next hand. The same applies to [[riichi]]. | ||
=== With riichi === | === With riichi === | ||
This yaku is typically accompanied with | This yaku is typically accompanied with riichi. Of course, the use of riichi is only advisable on the current state of the game: current point standing, other player riichi, threatening hands, and [[tile waits]]. | ||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Revision as of 20:37, 13 December 2013
Type | Yaku |
---|---|
Kanji |
門前清自摸和 ツモ |
English | Self draw |
Value | 1 han (closed only) |
Speed | Varies |
Difficulty | Varies |
Menzenchin tsumohou (門前清自摸和), otherwise referred as menzen tsumo or even simpler tsumo (ツモ), is a yaku involving closed hands. With a tenpai hand, a player attains this yaku by winning with a drawn tile.
Formation
With this yaku, all closed hands qualify for menzen tsumo. In fact, a closed hand may instantly win by self draw, even when it is the only yaku for the hand.
No open hand may qualify for this yaku. The instant a player calls on a discarded tile, then the player forfeits the right to declare this yaku until the next hand. The same applies to riichi.
With riichi
This yaku is typically accompanied with riichi. Of course, the use of riichi is only advisable on the current state of the game: current point standing, other player riichi, threatening hands, and tile waits.
External links
- Menzenchin tsumohou in Japanese Wikipedia
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