Kan: Difference between revisions

From Japanese Mahjong Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 8: Line 8:


# The player calls "kan".
# The player calls "kan".
# They set aside the four identical tiles next to any open melds. The four tiles now count as one meld.
# The four identical tiles are shown and are set aside, like an open call. Together, the four tiles now count as one [[Mentsu|tile group]].
# They draw a replacement tile from the dead wall to maintain the proper hand size for four melds and a pair.
# Then, a replacement tile is drawn from the dead wall.  This acts as the replacement tile to maintain the proper hand size for four groups and a pair.
# The last tile from the wall is added to the dead wall, so that the dead wall contains 14 tiles at all times. Some players omit this step and just end the game when a total of 14 tiles remains in the wall and the dead wall combined.
# If this tile draw completes the hand. then the player may declare a win and claim [[rinshan kaihou|win]].
# The player flips the next dora indicator. Some rules may have this step last depending on the type of kan declared.
# Otherwise, the last tile from the wall is added to the dead wall, so that the dead wall contains 14 tiles at all times.
# The player may declare a [[rinshan kaihou|win]], declare more kans, or end their turn by discarding normally.
# If the hand has an additional opportunity to call kan, then the player may do so and invokes another kan process.
# Otherwise, the turn may end by discarding normally.
# Finally, the player flips the next dora indicator.


== Tile arrangements ==
== Tile arrangements ==

Revision as of 10:13, 2 September 2015

Example hand featuring kans.

Kan 「カン」 is a special tile call in the game. This call forms a tile grouping of four identical tiles, called kantsu 「槓子」. While appearing as a four-of-a-kind, the tiles used to form kantsu actually function as a three-of-a-kind plus one extra tile. With this in mind, upon calling kan, players are required to make an extra tile draw from the dead wall. This drawn tile is called the rinshanpai, or dead wall draw. After the kan call and player's discard, then another dora indicator is revealed. The strength of kan play stems from the exclusive access to the dead wall and the revealing of additional dora. At the same time, kan play is very risky. Therefore, the ability to call kan is left to a player's discretion.

Procedure

Instance where kan is denied due to lack of live wall tiles.

Like the other tile calls, kan is also a tile call. However, it comes with special properties and rules. These rules apply when a player possesses or gains possession of four of the same tile; and then the player makes the kan call.

  1. The player calls "kan".
  2. The four identical tiles are shown and are set aside, like an open call. Together, the four tiles now count as one tile group.
  3. Then, a replacement tile is drawn from the dead wall. This acts as the replacement tile to maintain the proper hand size for four groups and a pair.
  4. If this tile draw completes the hand. then the player may declare a win and claim win.
  5. Otherwise, the last tile from the wall is added to the dead wall, so that the dead wall contains 14 tiles at all times.
  6. If the hand has an additional opportunity to call kan, then the player may do so and invokes another kan process.
  7. Otherwise, the turn may end by discarding normally.
  8. Finally, the player flips the next dora indicator.

Tile arrangements

Tiles called for "kan" are set aside. In most cases, they are called for open tile groups. However, one arrangement in particular still indicates a closed hand ("menzen").

Closed

The first arrangement is preferred, but the second arrangement is also acceptable.

Called

Daiminkan are indicated as open tile groups, with the four tiles next to each other and one tile turned to indicate the player it was called from. For daiminkan claims from toimen, or the player across, it does not matter which "middle" tile is turned sideways, as long as it is one of the middle tiles.

Added

Shouminkan are indicated as open tile groups, by stacking the added tile above the rotated tile from the original minkou.

  • (from kamicha, left)
  • (from toimen, across)
  • (from shimocha, right)

Kan types

Kan can occur under three different occasions; and thus, there are three types of kan based on drawing order:

  • Closed triplet with the fourth tile type discarded
  • Open triplet with the fourth tile type drawn
  • All four tile types drawn

Daiminkan

Example

Daiminkan 「大明槓」 is also called an "open kan". A player possesses three of a tile type within the hand. Then the fourth is discarded. The player may claim the discarded tile and form a daiminkan. Upon doing so, the player has opened the hand, if the hand was initially closed.

Most rules do not allow to flip the kan dora indicator immediately after a daiminkan declaration. It is usually flipped after discarding, or upon another kan declaration on the same turn. Some rules allow the kan dora indicator to be flipped immediately.

A daiminkan may not be made with the last discard of the game, which invokes the follow up procedure to take a rinshanpai. Because all tiles from the regular wall are used, no replacement tile from the regular wall to the dead wall could be made in order to maintain the dead wall at 14 tiles. Taking a rinshanpai in this case would reduce the dead wall count to 13, which not acceptable.

Some rules invoke sekinin barai on a player discarding into the daiminkan.

Shouminkan

Example

Shouminkan 「小明槓」 is referred as an "added kan", where a player had previously called pon to form a minkou, or open triplet. Upon drawing the fourth tile, the player may add that tile to the minkou and upgrade it to a shominkan. If the fourth tile was discarded by another player, it cannot be claimed by kan. The kan dora indicator is flipped at the same time as for a daiminkan. Another term to describe this kan is chakan 「加槓」.

The player may declare this kan during any turn; and therefore, the player does not need to declare kan immediately at first opportunity. If the player has just claimed a discarded tile instead of drawing a tile from the wall or the dead wall, then the ability to declare kan is disabled on this turn. The player would have to wait for the next tile draw instead. It is also forbidden to declare a kan while the wall is empty, because the dead wall cannot be replenished.

This kan call is vulnerable to one specific yaku: chankan or robbing the kan. If another player is tenpai and the added tile completes his hand, that player may call ron immediately after the shominkan declaration. It ends the hand before the kan is completed; therefore no new kan dora indicator is flipped.

Ankan

Example

Also known as a "closed kan", a player may draw all four of a tile type. Unlike the other two kan types, ankan 「暗槓」 keeps the hand closed, unless the hand has been opened previously. Thus, even with an ankan call, the player may still have the option of declaring riichi upon tenpai, and/or winning the hand via mentsumo.

Per rule variation, the kandora indicator is flipped immediately with an ankan call, rather than waiting for the player's discard or the rinshan draw.

Like a shominkan, an ankan may be declared on any turn while the player holds all four tiles. The same restrictions as for the shominkan apply. An ankan may not be subject to chankan, except against a kokushi tenpai, if the rules allow.

Multiple kan calls

If in possession with the proper tiles, a player may call kan more than once consecutively. The extremely rare case of up to four consecutive kan calls within a single turn is possible.

Example:

Draw:

In this example, kan may be called twice in a row after drawing 1-man. Both the 1-man and south may each be called for shominkan, before making a discard. Naturally, this must be done one at a time, following the proper procedure for kan.

As for kan dora, ankan (closed kan) is the only case, where a new indicator is shown immediately after the kan call. Otherwise, the number of kan indicators is one less than the number of kan consecutive calls. In the case of the above example, two added kans were called sequentially; but only one kan dora indicator was shown upon winning the hand.

Restrictions

Some restrictions apply to kan calls. The restrictions are based on tile counts and rules pertaining to riichi itself.

Abortive draw

When abortive draws are used, four kan calls causes an abortive draw, unless they were all made by the same player. When the same player makes all four calls, then no more calls for kan can be made until the next hand. Part of the kan process involves drawing from the dead wall. However, the dead wall only allots four tiles for this procedure. Naturally, when none are left, then the call for a "fifth kan" cannot be made.

Kan during riichi

Kan calls after riichi is possible and may be allowed or disallowed depending on the hand's composition. Under all of these cases, the call for a closed kan is used. The other two types of kan calls cannot occur, as riichi requires closed hand.

When a riichi declarer holds three identical tiles and draws the fourth after the riichi announcement, the player may form an ankan from these tiles instead of discarding the fourth. The hand composition and the possible winning tiles may not change: it is not allowed to declare kan if, for some possible winning tile, any of the three identical tiles may be interpreted as part of a sequence or part of the pair.

If a player does declare a kan illegally during riichi, and they call ron or the game goes to an exhaustive draw, then they will be penalized with a chombo penalty for breaking the rule. If a player is not required to reveal their hand, or if another player wins, they will normally not be penalized.

Of course, a player may outright decline the call for kan and discard the drawn tile. After all, the play invokes a risk pertaining to the kandora. During a riichi call, the player is defenseless against the benefactors of the new dora.

Example 1:

Illegal kan: Legal kan: .

It is not allowed to kan the fours. The manzu tiles may either be interpreted as a 3-4 ryanmen wait and a 4-4 pair, or as a 4-man ankou with a 3-man tanki wait. A kan call would alter the wait just for a 3-man tanki. For a legal kan declaration, the three identical tiles would have to be an ankou in any interpretation. Had the player drawn a west wind, he would have been allowed to kan it.

Example 2:

Legal kan: or .

In this example, none of the waits are affected by any of the kan possibilities. The waiting tiles are completely unrelated to any of the existing triplets in this hand. Therefore, it is acceptable to call kan during riichi here.

Example 3:

Illegal kan:

Here, the waits are 457p. A kan on 6p would remove the 7p wait, so it is obviously not permitted. A kan on the 3p would not change the waits, however, if the hand was won with 4p, the hand could be interpreted as:

In this case, the 3p does not form a triplet, but rather a pair and a part of a sequence. A kan on the 3p would remove this potential interpretation of the hand, and is therefore forbidden.

Last tile

Kan cannot be called after drawing the last tile, as the live wall is empty and so a tile cannot be moved to the dead wall. Part of the kan process requires live tiles from the end of the wall to be transferred to the dead wall. If this is not possible, then kan is not possible.

Tile calls

After taking a discarded tile, a player cannot call kan, even if a player has the tile(s) available in hand to do so. The next opportunity to call kan comes after the next tile draw. This does not apply when a daiminkan is called, as the kan causes a tile to be drawn immediately.

Suukaikan

This is an "abortive draw", regarding kan calls. From the dead wall, only four tile can be used as rinshan pai. The remaining tiles from the dead wall are used as dora indicators, or they are tile replacements from the regular wall. Neither of these two tile type can be used in play. As a result, the limit of kan calls for a hand session is set to four. After the fourth kan call, the kyoku (hand session) ends after the discard, barring that discard cannot be called for a win.

However, an exception is made for players with suukantsu tenpai. After the fourth kan call, the game continues giving the player a chance to score the yakuman. Other than another player winning, this chance may be abruptly ended with a fifth call for a kan; and the hand ends immediately.[1] Otherwise, the game may continue to ryuukyoku.

Yaku

In general, tiles called for kan are still applied as triplets. Any call for kan does not interfere with any yaku dependent on triplets, such as sanankou or yakuhai. Four yaku are centered around kan calls. One applies a win via the kan draw; and the other is applied to added kans. Then the last two are composed of kans.

Chankan

Chankan is a yaku applied on a shominkan (added kan) declaration. A hand in tenpai for a kan call on a tile added to a called pon may declare ron on that tile.

Rinshan kaihou

Rinshan kaihou is a yaku gained by calling tsumo on the replacement tile after any type of kan declaration.

Sankantsu and suukantsu

Both sankantsu and suukantsu require kan calls in order to count. The first requires three calls, while the latter calls for four. Both are rather difficult due to this requirement. Sankantsu is not a yakuman, but some yakuman are actually easier to attain. Suukantsu is by far the most difficult and most rare yakuman to attain.

Kan risks

This hand was suddenly upgraded by 3-han with the call of the haku kan. [1].

The nature of kan dora makes the call for kan a risky maneuver. With this in mind, some quick assessment is needed before making such a call.

References

External links

Kan in Japanese Wikipedia