6:05 Thanks for the detailed explanation... until you mentioned aka nashi a second time I was preparing to argue that I haven't heard anything like this before (that keeping 356 is favorable when a 4 seems unlikely to appear).
Hello! I have a question. At 28:27 you call 4p a "double-unsafe tile" -- what exactly is meant by that? Also, I'm quite happy that I wanted to make almost all of the same moves as you! Thank you for another great video!
Double unsafe was a sort of mixed thought in my mind, the downside of these less formal videos- unsafe tile because it was double musuji- neither the 1 or the 7 had come out, so throwing a 4 in that situation has a very high deal-in rate.
@@Crow77 I mean it is 100% safe against kamicha and shimocha, and the player across would have to be on a pair wait for it, so isn’t it the safest tile to discard at that point?
In this case, breaking a pair that is safe against the riichi, not having a ton of tedashi central tiles, and even not being open or declaring riichi are pretty good indicators. One or another may be hit or miss, but all of them combined sends a signal I feel I can trust.
6:05 Thanks for the detailed explanation... until you mentioned aka nashi a second time I was preparing to argue that I haven't heard anything like this before (that keeping 356 is favorable when a 4 seems unlikely to appear).
Hello! I have a question. At 28:27 you call 4p a "double-unsafe tile" -- what exactly is meant by that? Also, I'm quite happy that I wanted to make almost all of the same moves as you! Thank you for another great video!
Double unsafe was a sort of mixed thought in my mind, the downside of these less formal videos- unsafe tile because it was double musuji- neither the 1 or the 7 had come out, so throwing a 4 in that situation has a very high deal-in rate.
@@Crow77 Ah! That makes perfect sense! I had figured maybe there was something else I'd missed. I overthought it. Thank you, Crow!
30:33 felt it and made me laugh
Nice commentary tho , I really enjoyed it and learnt a lot
9:21 Kamicha discarded a west last turn so I’d say it’s pretty safe no?
Pretty safe sure, but I want to go for 100 percent safe in this position. The west winds will keep.
@@Crow77 I mean it is 100% safe against kamicha and shimocha, and the player across would have to be on a pair wait for it, so isn’t it the safest tile to discard at that point?
No, by my view of the game kami isn't tenpai, toimen wouldn't have a yaku on it, and it's genbutsu against shimo.
You’re talking about 3 sou? Yeah assuming kamicha isn’t tenpai it would be safer, but why is that?
In this case, breaking a pair that is safe against the riichi, not having a ton of tedashi central tiles, and even not being open or declaring riichi are pretty good indicators. One or another may be hit or miss, but all of them combined sends a signal I feel I can trust.