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'''Suu Anko''' is one of the standard yakuman hands. This hand consists of four concealed triplets and a pair, i.e. none of the triplets must have been claimed from other players' discards. Depending on the wait, this hand may be worth one yakuman or two: If the hand is on a shanpon wait, the winning tile must be a tsumo and not a discard of another player, and the hand is worth one yakuman; if the hand is on a tanki wait, the winning tile may come from another player's discard, and the hand is worth two yakuman. This hand is closed only.
{{Infobox yaku
|type        = Yakuman
|kanji      = 四暗刻<br>四暗刻単騎
|english    = Four concealed triplets<br>Same with pair wait
|value      = Yakuman
|yakuSpeed  = Slow
|difficulty  = Hard
|yakuCombine = * [[Daisangen]]
* [[Chinrotou]]
* [[Shousuushii]]
* [[Daisuushii]]
* [[Ryuuiisou]]
* [[Tsuuiisou]]
|gameExample = * [http://tenhou.net/0/?log=2012110819gm-0009-7447-b68a0585&tw=2&ts=4 Not suuankou] <!--Would prefer non-yakuman but similar example here-->
* [http://tenhou.net/0/?log=2012110112gm-0009-7447-14ec5c8d&tw=0&ts=4 Suuankou] with [[furiten]]
* [http://tenhou.net/0/?log=2013061419gm-0089-0000-x0710ddfe09ea&tw=0&ts=8 Suuankou] via [[rinshan]]
* [http://tenhou.net/0/?log=2014010419gm-0009-8919-926c60fa&tw=3 Suuankou tanki]
}}
 
'''Suuankou''' {{kana|四暗刻}} is one of the standard [[yakuman]] hands. As a direct translation, this hand consists of four concealed [[ankou|triplets]] and a pair.
 
If the hand is on a [[shanpon]] wait (two pairs waiting to complete a triplet), the winning tile must be a [[tsumo|self-draw]] and not a [[ron|discard]] from another player.  While ron does not open the hand, it does open the resulting ''triplet'', thus invalidating the yakuman.
 
'''Suuankou tanki''' {{kana|四暗刻単騎}} is a variant which features the hand with a [[tanki]] [[Machi|wait]].  The hand in this state may win from another player's discard, and it still counts as a yakuman.  In this case, all four triplets are present in the hand.  A hand of this pattern may count [[Multiple yakuman|double yakuman]], as an added [[Yaku variations#Multiple_yakuman|variation]].
 
For either type of suuankou, the hand itself must be closed only in order to count for yakuman.  So, none of the triplets must have been [[Naki|claimed]] from other players' discards.  An "all triplet" hand with open calls would then either count for [[toi toi]], [[sanankou]], or both.


==Tile diagram==
==Tile diagram==
*Suu Anko tsumo
{{#mjt: 55666p11188s666z}} Tsumo: {{#mjt: 5p}} or {{#mjt: 8s}}.  
{{#mjt: 55666p11188s666z}} Winning tile: {{#mjt: 5p}} or {{#mjt: 8s}}. Either tile must be a tsumo.
 
Either tile must be won by tsumo.  Otherwise, this hand is [[toitoi]] and [[sanankou]].
 
===Tanki===
'''Example 1:'''
:{{#mjt: 888p333444s9m222z}} Agari: {{#mjt:9m}}
 
The hand scores a yakuman whether the 9-man is won via tsumo or ron. It can be considered a double yakuman in some rulesets.
 
'''Example 2'''
 
:{{#mjt:333p2223777s}} {{#mjt:0z11s0z}} [[Takame]]: {{#mjt:3s}} [[Yasume]]: {{#mjt:1s}} (unavailable), {{#mjt:4s}} <ref>http://tenhou.net/0/?log=2014120608gm-00c1-0000-0d17db7f&tw=0&ts=6</ref>
 
If the tanki wait is combined with [[Ryantan|additional patterns]], then the yakuman may not be guaranteed. The hand has multiple waits allowing the win, but only one (3-sou) produces the yakuman.
 
==Value==
 
This hand is automatically a [[Scoring table|yakuman hand]], won by [[mentsumo|tsumo]] using a [[shanpon]] (tenpai holding two pairs) or any win if using a [[tanki]] (one tile waiting for a duplicate). 
 
Variants may allow suuankou tanki to count as a double yakuman. Some rules may only award the double yakuman if it is won from tsumo; others allow a double yakuman no matter how the suuankou tanki is won.
 
==Formation==
[[Image:Real suuankou.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Suuankou tsumo on 9-sou.]]
 
All four of the ''triplets'' must be concealed for this hand to be counted as yakuman. As mentioned above, if a triplet is completed via ron, then the triplet is not considered concealed. Therefore, if the hand has a [[shanpon]] wait, it can only win by tsumo. [[Kan|Closed kan]]s are acceptable, as kans are considered triplets. Of course, calling [[pon]] automatically invalidates the yakuman.  


*Suu Anko tanki
It is one of the three '''yakuman gosanke''' {{kana|役満御三家}}, or "the three big families of yakuman", along with [[kokushi musou]] and [[daisangen]]. These are the three most common yakuman in the game. Suuankou itself is the most common yakuman in 4-player, likely because it can be formed from any type of tile. The difficulty of this yakuman stems from the need to draw at least 3 out of 4 of a single tile type, for four different tile types.
{{#mjt: 888p3334445s222z}} Winning tile: {{#mjt: 5s}}
*Note: This wait is considered worth two yakuman.


==English reference==
==References==
*Four concealed triplets
{{references}}


==Fu==
==External links==
This hand is a yakuman hand which automatically awards 32000 points to a non-dealer winner, or 48000 points to a dealer winner. Therefore, fu is not counted.
{{jpwiki|四暗刻}}


==Usage==
[[Category:Yakuman]]
<!--Strategy and tips on best implementing Suu Anko-->


[[Category: Yaku]]
{{Navbox yaku}}

Latest revision as of 04:10, 8 April 2024

Suuankou
Type Yakuman
Kanji 四暗刻
四暗刻単騎
English Four concealed triplets
Same with pair wait
Value Yakuman
Speed Slow
Difficulty Hard

Suuankou 「四暗刻」 is one of the standard yakuman hands. As a direct translation, this hand consists of four concealed triplets and a pair.

If the hand is on a shanpon wait (two pairs waiting to complete a triplet), the winning tile must be a self-draw and not a discard from another player. While ron does not open the hand, it does open the resulting triplet, thus invalidating the yakuman.

Suuankou tanki 「四暗刻単騎」 is a variant which features the hand with a tanki wait. The hand in this state may win from another player's discard, and it still counts as a yakuman. In this case, all four triplets are present in the hand. A hand of this pattern may count double yakuman, as an added variation.

For either type of suuankou, the hand itself must be closed only in order to count for yakuman. So, none of the triplets must have been claimed from other players' discards. An "all triplet" hand with open calls would then either count for toi toi, sanankou, or both.

Tile diagram

Tsumo: or .

Either tile must be won by tsumo. Otherwise, this hand is toitoi and sanankou.

Tanki

Example 1:

Agari:

The hand scores a yakuman whether the 9-man is won via tsumo or ron. It can be considered a double yakuman in some rulesets.

Example 2

Takame: Yasume: (unavailable), [1]

If the tanki wait is combined with additional patterns, then the yakuman may not be guaranteed. The hand has multiple waits allowing the win, but only one (3-sou) produces the yakuman.

Value

This hand is automatically a yakuman hand, won by tsumo using a shanpon (tenpai holding two pairs) or any win if using a tanki (one tile waiting for a duplicate).

Variants may allow suuankou tanki to count as a double yakuman. Some rules may only award the double yakuman if it is won from tsumo; others allow a double yakuman no matter how the suuankou tanki is won.

Formation

Suuankou tsumo on 9-sou.

All four of the triplets must be concealed for this hand to be counted as yakuman. As mentioned above, if a triplet is completed via ron, then the triplet is not considered concealed. Therefore, if the hand has a shanpon wait, it can only win by tsumo. Closed kans are acceptable, as kans are considered triplets. Of course, calling pon automatically invalidates the yakuman.

It is one of the three yakuman gosanke 「役満御三家」, or "the three big families of yakuman", along with kokushi musou and daisangen. These are the three most common yakuman in the game. Suuankou itself is the most common yakuman in 4-player, likely because it can be formed from any type of tile. The difficulty of this yakuman stems from the need to draw at least 3 out of 4 of a single tile type, for four different tile types.

References

External links

Suuankou in Japanese Wikipedia