Menchin, iipeikou, 2 dora -> Baiman*sniffle*Ahh~ Thanks so much for coming!
It's really tough on my own.Even if you flatter me, all you'll get out of it is tacos.This time's also more yaku explanations!
Clean out your ears and listen up!ExampleMenzen, hon'itsu, dabuton -> HanemanAs usual, explanations are by Taco Yuuki.
And here's our guest for this time!
It's Etopen!Hello. I am Etopen.
(ventriloquism)...I won't lose...By the way, it's very common for hon'iisou to be called hon'itsu and chin'iisou to be called chin'itsu.
Also, when menzen, they're called "menhon" and "menchin"!DoraTsumoTonba, ShaachaRonHeya!!
It's Taco Yuuki's Mahjong Class!No, not at all. As long as Yuuki-chan is here, this corner will be fine.
(ventriloquism)First up this time is this! "Hon'iisou".
It's a yaku worth three han if menzen, two han with kuisagari!
This is a yaku made by only using one type of numbered tiles, plus jihai.
If you do well with the jihai, you can make mangan even with kuisagari.
You can also make your wait hard to read if you can make a shanpon wait for both number tiles and jihai, so it's a very usable, good yaku.
If you make it entirely with number tiles, it becomes "chin'iisou", a yaku worth 6 han!
Even with kuisagari, this is worth 5 han.
In other words, even without anything else to increase your han, it's a high-value yaku that's already worth mangan!Hon'itsu, Ikki, Hatsu -> ManganChin'itsu -> ManganTonba, TonchaNanba, PeichaTsumoTonba, NanchaRon