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  2. Mahjong culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahjong_culture

    Mahjong is played almost anywhere a table is available or can be set up. This ranges from people's homes, streets, and sidewalks, or even workplaces. Indeed, playing mahjong can be considered a form of social gathering. Some consider mahjong to be primarily luck and only partly skill. As such, divination and fortune play a large part in mahjong.

  3. Mah-Jongg (lemur) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mah-Jongg_(lemur)

    Mah-Jongg (lemur) Mah-Jongg or Jongy was a ring-tailed lemur owned by Virginia and Stephen Courtauld, wealthy English philanthropists from a family of industrialists . Jongy was purchased at Harrods, one of London's most upmarket department stores, in 1923 and lived with the Courtaulds for fifteen years, accompanying the couple on their travels ...

  4. Yakuman (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yakuman_(video_game)

    Yakuman (役満) is a 1989 mahjong video game developed by Intelligent Systems and published by Nintendo for its handheld Game Boy as one of the Japanese launch titles. It is the first entry in a series of first-party Japanese mahjong games on Nintendo systems, with sequels on the Famicom, Game Boy Advance, DS, Wii, Wii U, and 3DS.

  5. 4 Nin Uchi Mahjong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4_Nin_Uchi_Mahjong

    JP: November 2, 1984. Genre (s) Mahjong. Mode (s) Single-player. 4 Nin Uchi Mahjong [a] [1] is a 1984 mahjong video game developed by Hudson Soft and published by Nintendo for the Famicom. It was released exclusively in Japan. It is the second mahjong game published by Nintendo.

  6. Scoring in Mahjong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scoring_in_Mahjong

    Scoring in Mahjong. Scoring in Mahjong, a game for four players that originated in China, involves the players obtaining points for their hand of tiles, then paying each other based on the differences in their score and who obtained mahjong (won the hand). The points are given a monetary value agreed by the players.

  7. Japanese mahjong scoring rules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_Mahjong_scoring_rules

    The basic points are thus 40 × 2 (2+2) = 640. The dealer pays the winner 640 × 2 = 1,280, rounded up to 1,300 points. The other two non-dealers pay the winner 640, rounded up to 700 points. Example 2: The same player goes out by the same hand, except this time the winning tile was discarded by the player on the right.

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