Mahjong
1850
BGG Geek Rating
6.6
based on 8,044 ratings
BGG Average Rating
7.1
community average
BGG Ranking
#989
all board games
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Players
3-4
Weight
2.58/5.00
Playtime
120 min
Age
8+
⚙️ Game Mechanics
How this game works - core systems and player actions
📂 Categories
🎨 Artists
🏢 Publishers
Parker Brothers
Miro Company
Brybelly
Blizzard Entertainment
Philos
SYU Creation
Carlsberg
Kerry's Mah Jong
Brevete S.G.D.G.
A. D. Richter & Cie.
Laurence King Publishing Ltd
Olsen
Perry & Co. Ltd.
Royal Depth
Weico Produkte GmbH
Dilemma Games
Dal Negro
Revanche Spelen
Woodstock Spiele
SPM: Syarikat Permainan Malaysia
Wood Expressions
Rosiness
Geoludie
John Jaques of London
Skor-Mor
ASS Altenburger Spielkarten
John Sands Pty Ltd
Jumbo
Chad Valley Co Ltd.
De La Rue
Kärnan
Franz Schmidt
E. S. Lowe Company Inc.
Creative Crafthouse
Grapet
Gibsons
Fratelli Fabbri Editori (Fabbri Editore)
Grow Jogos e Brinquedos
Kirjalito
Golden
Michael Stanfield
CHH Games
Educa Borras
Alga
Sterling Games
Zontik Games
Schmidt Spiele
Yellow Mountain Imports
Crisloid
U3
Chinese Arts & Crafts
Spółdzielnia Rzemieślnicza Wielobranżowa "Przemysław"
Monkey Pod Games
KR
Golconda
Guanhua (冠華)
Longfield Games
Intercontor AG
John Lewis
Hartung-Spiele
H. P. Gibson & Sons
Fame Products
Cardinal
(Public Domain)
(Unknown)
Tactic
Wizards of the Coast
📖 About This Game
Mah-Jongg (Chinese 麻å°/éº»å° Májiàng [game of the] sparrow) is a traditional Chinese game using illustrated tiles, with game play similarities to rummy. It is a popular gambling game, but wagering real stakes is by no means necessary to have fun playing.
The tiles consist of three suits numbering 1-9 (Dots, Numbers or Characters, and Bamboo, the "Ace" of which almost always looks like a bird), three different dragons (Red, Green, and White [white is unusual in that it may look like a silvery dragon, or like a picture frame, or blank - think "White dragon in a snowstorm"), and the four winds (east, south, west, and north). There are four copies of each tile. This totals to 136 tiles. In addition, special Flower, Season, and Joker (American version) tiles may also be used.
Four players take turns drawing from a stock (the wall), or from the other players' discards, in an attempt to form sets of numeric sequences (e.g., 5-6-7 of the same suit, which can only be drawn from the player at one's left, by calling "Chow"), triplets and quadruplets (which can be drawn from the discards out-of-turn by calling "Pung"), pairs, and other patterns. "Pung" takes precedence over "Chow", and "Mah Jongg" takes precedence over all (and is the only situation one may draw "Chow" out-of-turn.) What happens if a single discard would give two (or more!) players "Mah Jongg"? Precedence goes to the player who would play next in normal sequence.
Originating in China in the mid-19th century, it was introduced to the U.S. in the 1920s. It is now played in different forms throughout Asia, Europe, North America, Australia, and New Zealand. Although the rules for game play are fairly constant, there are an immense variety of scoring schemes. A few general categories of rule-sets include: Chinese Classical, Hong Kong Old Style, Japanese, Taiwanese, Western, and American.