Tanki

Revision as of 17:58, 10 July 2015 by KyuuAA (talk | contribs) (→‎Usage)

Tanki 「単騎」 is a common type of wait pattern. Most mahjong hands form to complete the fourth meld. However, a handful of mahjong hands can be formed with four complete melds, while needing to finish the pair. That makes this pattern referred to as the "pair wait". Unlike the other basic patterns, there are a few types of pair waits to consider.

Tanki
Kanji 単騎
English Pair wait
Fu 2 fu
Tile types waiting 1 sided wait
Tiles available 3 tiles
Pattern example
Tenhou.net example

Pattern

             

The wait pattern involves waiting for a single tile.

Hadaka tanki

 
Hadaka tanki in an undefendable position.

              

Hadaka tanki 「裸単騎」 is a special type of pair wait pattern. A hand in this state has called for discarded tiles four times. Upon doing so, only one tile is left closed in the hand. The yakuman suukantsu always ends up as hadaka tanki at tenpai.

Of all the hand possibilities, hadaka tanki is the weakest position in terms of defending. Only one tile can be exchanged by the draw-discard process. This is due to the static nature of tiles in open calls. The worst case scenario for a hand in hadaka tanki involves both the waiting tile and the drawn tile as winning tiles for another player. In this case, a player has no choice but to play into another player's hand.

Harabote

             

Harabote 「腹ボテ」 is a type of pair wait. Here, the middle tile is duplicated in a sequence. So, the waiting tile is that single duplicated tile. With two of the tiles of that type in hand, this gives the wait one less tile to wait for compared to a regular tanki.

Chiitoitsu

Every chiitoitsu tenpai hand uses tanki, as the pattern looks to match up the last pair for completion.

Usage

 
Tile discarded appearing to be safe, when two already discarded.

Tanki, or single tile, is best used when seeking to win off of a player's discard. While the number of waiting tiles is limited to a maximum of three, the pattern has its uses. It's greatest strength stems from its ability to select any tile as a waiting tile, barring any tile limitations applied by certain yaku. Often enough, this pattern may confuse players; and even traps, like suji traps, may be employed. Waits involving honor tiles, especially when one is discarded, is actually powerful, because players may believe those tiles are actually safe tiles. All-in-all, this pattern is best used to counter or bait players, who are looking to defend.

External links