Atozuke: Difference between revisions

110 bytes removed ,  27 April 2015
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'''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 variations#Atozuke|Rule variations]] allow organizations and/or tournament hosts to use atozuke or sakizuke.  More commonly, atozuke is allowed.


== Cases ==
== Cases ==
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:{{#mjt:111m456s99p55z}} {{#mjt:7'89s}}  Draw: {{#mjt:9p}}
:{{#mjt:111m456s99p55z}} {{#mjt:7'89s}}  Draw: {{#mjt:9p}}
Particularly, open yakuless hands run the risk of [[furiten]].  That is especially true if the above example draws a 9-pin during the course of the hand, when additional tile draws remain in the wall.  In this case, a player cannot declare a win and must discard any tile in the hand.  Upon doing so, the player becomes furiten and must work around it, by changing its hand composition with the remain tile draws or other player discards.  Otherwise, the player needs to retain the hand at tenpai waiting for the appropriate winning tile or to let the hand end with [[ryuukyoku]].
Particularly, open yakuless hands run the risk of [[furiten]].  That is especially true if the above example draws a 9-pin during the course of the hand, when additional tile draws remain in the wall.  In this case, a player cannot declare a win and must discard any tile in the hand.  Upon doing so, the player becomes furiten and must work around it, by changing its hand composition with the remain tile draws or other player discards.  Otherwise, the player needs to retain the hand at tenpai waiting for the appropriate winning tile or to let the hand end with [[ryuukyoku]].
== 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 ==
<!-- {{jpwiki|完全先付け}} -->
<!-- {{jpwiki|完全先付け}} -->
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