Riichi

Declare that you are one tile from winning, with a closed hand, by betting a 1,000-point stick.

Value 1 han — closed hands only
How often very common
Mahjong hand: 4 of characters, 5 of characters, 6 of characters — 7 of characters, 8 of characters, 9 of characters — 1 of circles, 2 of circles, 3 of circles — 8 of bamboo, 8 of bamboo — 3 of bamboo, 4 of bamboo, winning tile: 2 of bamboo
Any closed tenpai hand qualifies — declare riichi, place a 1,000-point stick, and your hand is locked.

You're looking for one specific moment: your hand is closed and one tile from complete, the state called tenpai . Say "riichi", turn your discard sideways, and put a 1,000-point stick on the table. From then on the hand plays itself: you draw, and you either win or discard what you drew (one exception — a closed kan on a drawn tile that doesn't change your wait). If tenpai still feels fuzzy, start with riichi and tenpai.

The real skill is deciding whether to declare at all. Riichi adds a han, unlocks ura dora , and pressures the table; the price is that you can no longer adapt, and everyone knows you're one tile out. As a beginner, declare by default. The value usually beats the flexibility you give up. One check you should never skip: make sure your winning tile isn't already in your own discards. That's furiten , and it blocks you from winning off opponents' discards — see furiten.

Riichi also rarely arrives alone. Win by self-draw and menzen tsumo joins. Win within one go-around — with no calls in between — and so does ippatsu. A sequence hand on a two-sided wait often carries pinfu too, and the ura dora you flip at the end can turn a quiet declaration into a big hand.

Key points

Related yaku

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