Sanankou: Difference between revisions

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2. Case where the hand must be won by [[mentsumo|tsumo]]:
2. Case where the hand must be won by [[mentsumo|tsumo]]:
:{{#mjt:123m1113366p666s}} Tsumo: {{#mjt:3p}} or {{#mjt:6p}}
:{{#mjt:1113366p666s}} {{#mjt:2'13s}} Tsumo: {{#mjt:3p}} or {{#mjt:6p}}


3. Case where the hand is won by discard.
3. Case where the hand is won by discard.

Revision as of 20:07, 6 October 2015

Sanankou
Type Yaku
Kanji 三暗刻
English Three concealed triplets
Value 2 han
Speed Medium
Difficulty Medium

Sanankou 「三暗刻」 is a yaku, consisting of three concealed triplets (ankou). The third must not be completed off of another player's discard, as this would not count as concealed. However, if it is completed with a tsumo, then the yaku is awarded. A concealed kan is also counted as a concealed triplet. The hand this yaku is awarded to may be open or closed, as long as it meets the conditions. This yaku is awarded 2 han.

Tile pattern cases

1. Case where the yaku is guaranteed:

Agari:

2. Case where the hand must be won by tsumo:

Tsumo: or

3. Case where the hand is won by discard.

Ron: or

Note: A tsumo results in the suuankou yakuman.

Formation

This yaku requires three closed triplets, as it is defined as such. This leaves only one allowable tile call. It can be any open tile group.

Compatability

^ Ippatsu requires riichi to be of any use.

RCH DRI IPP SMO TAN PFU IPK ITT YAK SDJ SDO TOI SNA SNK CHA JUN RPK SSG HRO HON CHN CHI RIN HAI HOU CHK
SNA

Sanankou is incompatible with any yaku requiring more than one sequence, namely pinfu, iipeikou, ittsu, sanshoku, and ryanpeikou. It is incompatible with chiitoitsu, which requires no mentsu at all.

A natural combination involves toitoi. With one tile call, the hand needs to win by tsumo; otherwise by ron, only toitoi is counted. This premise is a similar case involving suuankou, which counts as yakuman via tsumo. Otherwise, it may not.

Suuankou tenpai

A tenpai hand with sanankou with toitoi is tenpai for suuankou. When this hand wins by discard, then the hand is not counted as suuankou. Instead, it is the combination of sanankou and toitoi. The fourth triplet completed by the discarded tile counts as an "open triplet", rather than a fourth closed one.

External links

Sanankou in Japanese Wikipedia