Furiten: Difference between revisions

48 bytes added ,  26 August 2013
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So, a riichi declarer is furiten when a chance to call ron has been declined. The ignored winning tile may have been a discarded tile or a [[Chankan|tile used to extend a minkou to a shominkan]].  The player will remain furiten for the rest of the hand and thus cannot call ron on any tile. Furiten applies even, if it is a different tile than the ignored one. This rule requires knowledge of all own [[machi|possible waits]].
So, a riichi declarer is furiten when a chance to call ron has been declined. The ignored winning tile may have been a discarded tile or a [[Chankan|tile used to extend a minkou to a shominkan]].  The player will remain furiten for the rest of the hand and thus cannot call ron on any tile. Furiten applies even, if it is a different tile than the ignored one. This rule requires knowledge of all own [[machi|possible waits]].


In a sense, this disallows a riichi declarer to be deceptive with regards to winning tiles.  The player may decline ron from one player and expect to declare against another player, off of the same time.  Naturally, during furiten, a declared riichi disallows that style of player.  However, this tactic is acceptable via [[damaten]] or with an open tenpai hand.
In a sense, this disallows a riichi declarer to be deceptive with regards to winning tiles.  The player could decline ron from one player and expect to declare ron against another player, off of the same time.  Of course, this is against the rule.  So, naturally, during furiten, a declared riichi disallows that style of player.  However, this tactic is acceptable via [[damaten]] or with an open tenpai hand.


=== Turn based furiten ===
=== Turn based furiten ===
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