- All of the character tiles are taken out, except for the 1-characters and 9-characters. This means All Terminals and Thirteen Orphans can still be scored.
- All of the yaku from regular Japanese Riichi style rules are still included, except for 'Three Colors, One Chii', which is impossible to score due to the missing characters tiles.
- The three players each build a wall 18 tiles long and 2 tiles high.
- After dealing the opening hands and separating the dead wall, flip over the fifth tile from the left of the dead wall instead of the third: This is your dora indicator tile.
- No player is the North Seat: They simply rotate between East, South, and West.
- Each player starts with 35000 points. The West Round is never played.
- Any turn after drawing, if a player has a north wind in his hand, he make declare 'north' and meld it as if it were a flower, drawing a replacement tile from the dead wall. This is called a 'north dora' and is worth 1 fan, but does not contribute to the 1 yaku minimum needed to win.
- Doing this does not open your hand if you were already concealed.
- You may meld a north wind that you draw after declaring riichi.
- If a player is waiting on a north wind, he may declare a win off of a player melding a north dora. This does not earn you the 'Rob a Gong' yaku.
- If the dora indicator is a west wind, every north dora is worth 2 fan instead of 1.
- If a player melds a north dora while another player has just declared Riichi, that player may no longer earn One-Shot.
- If you draw your winning tile after melding a north dora, you earn the 'Win off of a Replacement Tile' yaku.
- There is no abortive draw for "Four Players Riichi" or for "Same Four Winds", because there are only three players.
- You may not make any open chiis, except to declare a win. You may still make closed chiis, or open pungs and gongs.
- The same score table from regular Japanese Riichi style rules. This means that winning by tsumo is worth fewer points than winning by ron.
A blog for the rules and events happening with Mahjong at McGill. The official blog of the McGill Students' Mahjong Club (A Student Group of the Students’ Society of McGill University).
Tuesday, 10 November 2015
Sanma: Japanese Riichi 3-Player Variant
Often, it happens that only three people are available to play. Fortunately, there is a variant of Japanese Riichi style designed for three players. Here are how the rules differ from the regular Japanese Riichi rules:
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