Suukantsu

From Japanese Mahjong Wiki
Revision as of 13:01, 24 August 2024 by Hordes (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Suukantsu
Type Yakuman
Kanji 四槓子
English Four kans
Value Yakuman
Speed Extremely slow
Difficulty The most difficult

Suukantsu 「四槓子」 is a yakuman scored when the hand has called kan four times. Suukantsu is the rarest hand in the game, even rarer than tenhou or chiihou. It is also the longest, requiring 18 tiles total.

Tile pattern

Agari:

Development

Suukantsu tenpai with an inescapable hadaka tanki situation.

This yakuman requires four kan calls. As a result, the hand in tenpai always has a hadaka tanki wait. In order to call each kan, a player must draw at least 3 out of 4 tiles of a single tile type:

  • A player has a pair and calls pon, then draws the fourth to call kan.
  • A player has a closed triplet and calls kan on a discarded fourth.
  • A player draws all four of a tile type and calls kan.

Since suukantsu requires a player to draw into four closed triplets, any hand that scores suukantsu would also have met the requirements for the significantly easier suuankou. Since they are both worth the same value, there are very few reasons to go for suukantsu.

Reasons why suukantsu is so difficult:

  • You must obtain a total of 4/4 tiles of four different types, where 3/4 are self drawn.
  • If any other player has called kan, the hand becomes impossible. If playing with abortive draws, this will trigger suukaikan. If playing without, then players are still only allowed a combined total of 4 kans in one game, preventing the yakuman.
  • Calling four kans adds a total of four kan dora, which will greatly boost the value of others' hands. A player may not want to kan even once in order to avoid the extra dora.
  • Open & added kans are the easiest type of kan, but they require you to open your hand. Since there is no yaku for a kan until the third kan, committing to an open kan is risky.
  • Calling four kans immediately reveals you have a yakuman hand, so players are likely to defend.
  • The hand always has a hadaka tanki wait.

Finally, like any other yakuman, another player could have a faster hand and win before you.

Value

Despite the greater degree of difficulty and exceptionally low frequency of occurrence, the value remains as that of the other single yakuman.

External links

Suukantsu in Japanese Wikipedia