Atozuke: Difference between revisions

153 bytes added ,  16 September 2014
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'''Atozuke''' {{kana|後付け}} is the state of a yakuless [[tenpai]] hand, that gains [[yaku]] upon the claim of a winning tile.  In other words, the hand currently does not possess yaku, but it is tenpai.  However, this term does not necessarily apply to closed hands, whose only yaku is [[mentsumo]].  In the case of mentsumo, any tile produces yaku upon tsumo, which is not what atozuke implies.  The use of atozuke is subject to a variable rule, which may or may not allow its use.  That decision falls on a league, organization, or house rule.
'''Atozuke''' {{kana|後付け}} is the state of a "yakuless" [[tenpai]] hand, that gains [[yaku]] upon the claim of a winning tile.  In other words, the hand may currently does not possess yaku, but it is tenpai.  The term may to closed hands, until it wins on a tile draw for [[mentsumo]].  The use of atozuke is subject to a variable rule, which may or may not allow its use.  That decision falls on a league, organization, or house rule.


== Cases ==
== Cases ==
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== Sakizuke ==
== Sakizuke ==
'''Sakizuke''' {{kana|先付け}} is the complete opposite to atozuke.  In this case, the practice of using atozuke is disallowed.  With this rule in place, a player would have to take greater caution making open calls by either first ensuring yaku or handling the case of furiten.
'''Sakizuke''' {{kana|先付け}} is the complete opposite to atozuke.  In this case, the practice of using atozuke is disallowed.  With this rule in place, a player would have to take greater caution making open calls by either first ensuring yaku or handling the case of furiten.
== Rule implementation ==
{{main|Rule variations#Atozuke}}
The rule of atozuke is commonly enabled or disabled based on organizational preference.  If atozuke is disabled, then hands by which atozuke looks to be used in a hand does not have the ability to win.


== External links ==
== External links ==
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