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7/27/2025, 1:14:33 AM
>>532812254
>>532816230
E2:
Over here it was questionable, but not that bad, to cut your 1s and 8s early. Keeping the 1s would've helped if you drew the 2s, granting a powerful 1234s shape, but it's not the end of the world. Keeping this isolated east wind tile isn't very good, though. But where we really go wrong is at the 4p discard. Again, you should try to avoid discarding middle tiles so early.
Experienced players will look at this hand and recognize that we have a lot of pairs. There's a yaku called chiitoi (7 pairs), and it's often very good to aim for it. When you had 3 pairs, a good player would've seriously considered chiitoi. When you reached 4 pairs, chiitoi became far and away the best option for you to aim for. So discarding your 2p pair ruined that.
After that in this round, you made some good defensive discards and successfully folded against clearly stronger hands. Although your discard of the 6p was a bit questionable. Here we could alternatively apply the suji technique. Jyanshi 1 has discarded 3m. Jyanshi 4 has discarded 6m. So 3m is genbutsu (perfectly safe) against one player, and suji against another.
The furiten rule means you can't call ron on a tile that could've completed your hand. So Jyanshi 1 can't ron on a 3m, simple. But Jyanshi 4 couldn't call ron on a 3m IF he's trying to complete a 45m shape. The 45m could be completed by 6m, so he'd be in furiten in that case. Look at (or visualize) a keypad. 456 are in the middle. Discarding 4m makes 1m and 7m suji. The numbers above and below 4 on a keypad. Discarding 5m makes 2m and 8m suji. See how that works? Suji only applies to open waits, so it's not perfectly safe, but it's useful to consider.
>>532816230
E2:
Over here it was questionable, but not that bad, to cut your 1s and 8s early. Keeping the 1s would've helped if you drew the 2s, granting a powerful 1234s shape, but it's not the end of the world. Keeping this isolated east wind tile isn't very good, though. But where we really go wrong is at the 4p discard. Again, you should try to avoid discarding middle tiles so early.
Experienced players will look at this hand and recognize that we have a lot of pairs. There's a yaku called chiitoi (7 pairs), and it's often very good to aim for it. When you had 3 pairs, a good player would've seriously considered chiitoi. When you reached 4 pairs, chiitoi became far and away the best option for you to aim for. So discarding your 2p pair ruined that.
After that in this round, you made some good defensive discards and successfully folded against clearly stronger hands. Although your discard of the 6p was a bit questionable. Here we could alternatively apply the suji technique. Jyanshi 1 has discarded 3m. Jyanshi 4 has discarded 6m. So 3m is genbutsu (perfectly safe) against one player, and suji against another.
The furiten rule means you can't call ron on a tile that could've completed your hand. So Jyanshi 1 can't ron on a 3m, simple. But Jyanshi 4 couldn't call ron on a 3m IF he's trying to complete a 45m shape. The 45m could be completed by 6m, so he'd be in furiten in that case. Look at (or visualize) a keypad. 456 are in the middle. Discarding 4m makes 1m and 7m suji. The numbers above and below 4 on a keypad. Discarding 5m makes 2m and 8m suji. See how that works? Suji only applies to open waits, so it's not perfectly safe, but it's useful to consider.
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