Sanmenchan: Difference between revisions

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(Revision of terminology for common sanmen wait; minor rephrasing for other named patterns.)
 
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'''Sanmenchan''' {{kana|三面張}} is a class of [[machi|wait patterns]] for three-sided waits.  The most common involves a combination of two [[ryanmen]] (open wait).  In fact, this is the default form.  This pattern utilizes a string of five consecutive numbered tiles in the hand.  The exact middle tile of this string is one of the waiting tiles, while the other two hand off the edge of the string.  Hands can wait on three kinds of tiles using other forms.  Some of them take names of their own, while others do not.
'''Sanmenchan''' {{kana|三面張}} is a class of [[machi|wait patterns]] for three-sided waits.  The most common involves a combination of two [[ryanmen]] (open wait).  In fact, this is the default form.  This pattern utilizes a string of five consecutive numbered tiles in the hand.  The exact middle tile of this string is one of the waiting tiles, while the other two hand off the edge of the string.  Hands can wait on three kinds of tiles using other forms.  Some of them take names of their own, while others do not.


==Default tile pattern==
==Named patterns==


{{#mjt:000000z45678s00z}} Waiting for: {{#mjt:369s}}
===Standard Sanmen===
{{clear}}
{{octave|align=right}}
{{#mjt:000000z45678s00z}} Waiting for: {{#mjt:3s}}, {{#mjt:6s}}, or {{#mjt:9s}}
 
This pattern consists of five consecutive tiles (that do not include 1 or 9): two ryanmen connected by one mutual waiting tile in the middle. The three-sided waits generated from this pattern are the most common form of the three-sided wait; when the term sanmenchan is used on its own, it is often in reference to this pattern of wait.  The wait always points to one of the full [[suji]] patterns.
 
This pattern is a powerful wait due to the large number of waiting tiles: 11 maximum possible, using any of 3-tile types.  That number cannot be 12, due to one waiting tile (the middle number) already present in the hand.  The waiting pattern is limited, however, to one of the three numbered suits.  With [[suji]], the waiting pattern involves one of the three mahjong intervals.
 
===Entotsu===
{{#mjt:11m45666s000000z}} Waiting for: {{#mjt:1m}}, {{#mjt:3s}}, or {{#mjt:6s}}
 
[[Entotsu]] incorporates the [[shanpon]] wait and a [[ryanmen]].  The pattern always includes a ryanmen wait, tied to a triplet of one of the waiting tiles.  On top of that, any paired tile can be used with it.
 
===Ryantan===
{{#mjt:4555m000000000z}} Waiting for: {{#mjt:3m}}, {{#mjt:4m}}, {{#mjt:6m}}
 
[[Ryantan]] (a contraction of ryanmen + tanki) is composed of a triplet of a middle numbered tile with one more tile adjacent to the number, either one less or one more.  The single tile produces a tanki wait when we keep the triplet complete, and produces a ryanmen wait when we split the triplet into a pair and connected tile.


==Other named patterns==
===Sanmentan===
{| class="wikitable"
{{#mjt:2345678p000000z}} Waiting for: {{#mjt:2p}}, {{#mjt:5p}}, or {{#mjt:8p}}
|+ Caption text
|-
! Name !! Pattern !! Waiting
|-
| [[Entotsu]] || {{#mjt:11m45666s000000z}} || {{#mjt:1m}}, {{#mjt:3s}}, or {{#mjt:6s}}
|-
| [[Ryanmenten]] ||
|-
| [[Ryantan]] ||
|-
| [[Sanmentan]] || {{#mjt:2345678p000000z}} || {{#mjt:2p}}, {{#mjt:5p}}, or {{#mjt:8p}}
|}


==Fu==
[[Sanmentan]] (a contraction of three-sided tanki) consists of three tanki waits along suji lines.  This pattern is created through seven consecutive tiles.
Just like ryanmen, this tile pattern does not reward any [[fu]].


==Strategy==
=== Others ===
{{octave|align=right}}
A number of [[Complex_waits#3_tile_wait|three sided waits]] remain unnamed.  Instead, they are composed of named waits as combinations of each other.
Sanmenchan is a powerful wait due to the large number of waiting tiles: 11 maximum possible, using any of 3-tile types.  That number cannot be 12, due to one waiting tile (the middle number) already present in the hand.  The waiting pattern is limited, however, to one of the three numbered suits.  With [[suji]], the waiting pattern involves one of the three mahjong intervals.


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

Latest revision as of 04:25, 11 September 2023

Sanmenchan
Kanji 三面張
Fu 0 fu
Tile types waiting 3 sided wait
Tiles available 11 tiles
Pattern example
Tenhou.net example Open
Furiten

Sanmenchan 「三面張」 is a class of wait patterns for three-sided waits. The most common involves a combination of two ryanmen (open wait). In fact, this is the default form. This pattern utilizes a string of five consecutive numbered tiles in the hand. The exact middle tile of this string is one of the waiting tiles, while the other two hand off the edge of the string. Hands can wait on three kinds of tiles using other forms. Some of them take names of their own, while others do not.

Named patterns

Standard Sanmen

Waiting for: , , or

This pattern consists of five consecutive tiles (that do not include 1 or 9): two ryanmen connected by one mutual waiting tile in the middle. The three-sided waits generated from this pattern are the most common form of the three-sided wait; when the term sanmenchan is used on its own, it is often in reference to this pattern of wait. The wait always points to one of the full suji patterns.

This pattern is a powerful wait due to the large number of waiting tiles: 11 maximum possible, using any of 3-tile types. That number cannot be 12, due to one waiting tile (the middle number) already present in the hand. The waiting pattern is limited, however, to one of the three numbered suits. With suji, the waiting pattern involves one of the three mahjong intervals.

Entotsu

Waiting for: , , or

Entotsu incorporates the shanpon wait and a ryanmen. The pattern always includes a ryanmen wait, tied to a triplet of one of the waiting tiles. On top of that, any paired tile can be used with it.

Ryantan

Waiting for: , ,

Ryantan (a contraction of ryanmen + tanki) is composed of a triplet of a middle numbered tile with one more tile adjacent to the number, either one less or one more. The single tile produces a tanki wait when we keep the triplet complete, and produces a ryanmen wait when we split the triplet into a pair and connected tile.

Sanmentan

Waiting for: , , or

Sanmentan (a contraction of three-sided tanki) consists of three tanki waits along suji lines. This pattern is created through seven consecutive tiles.

Others

A number of three sided waits remain unnamed. Instead, they are composed of named waits as combinations of each other.

External links

Sanmenchan in Japanese Wikipedia