I really like you also including examples of Japanese pro players. The English-speaking mahjong world is missing out on so much good content just because of the language barrier.
Thanks for these videos. They really help building a strong basis for my games. An important topic would be how to play towards the ending of a round, especially considering keiten and exhaustive draws. I don't really know how to judge if going for keiten is worth the risk of pushing certain tiles.
I have a notebook with notes from various mahjong books and online lessons. Your guides are always super valuable! I'd really love to see more about a topic you've touched on both in this and other videos -- playing around the idea that mahjong isn't a 1-versus-3 game. In this video, for instance, you talked about shifting haitei to the fourth place player to support them into potentially making the first place dealer kanburi into second place. In Mahjong Techniques Explained #4, you talked about having more options than just Push and Fold, and that there are also the options of Assist and Block. This is by far the most interesting part of mahjong to me and I'd love to hear more from you about the topic.
Fantastic video! Very informative and easy to understand, as usual. After having a fellow player look at some of my games recently, I realized I had a problem: whenever I saw my haipai, unless there was a VERY obvious way to make a high-scoring open hand, I would almost always default to pursuing riichi. Going for riichi by default isn't _that_ bad, but I realized it was costing me a lot of flexibility. For reference, my call rate was hovering around 20% before this. I've since tried to think harder about calls, and to generally just call a bit more aggressively; so far I've actually found decent success with it. That same player helped me understand why calling more is important (as well as when / how to do it), and a lot of what he mentioned matches up with the tips in this video, so I'm glad to see I'm on the right track!
Thank you for this comprehensive video. It would seem I still have a lot to learn about this game, but I’m so happy to see more content creators help to break the language barrier so people like me can learn more. If possible, I’d love to see a video about when and how to decide what yaku to go for in a given scenario, or maybe common pitfalls for newer players. Thank you very much once again, and have a great day!
Hello Xanxust! I love your educational content. Can you make a video regarding when to push, when to fold, when to play quick hands, when to play big hands?
@@kotoriminami2560 hello, thanks for the support! I've been thinking of working on such a video actly, maybe once I'm off work and have some free time Thanks for the suggestion! I think it's a good video idea
I really like you also including examples of Japanese pro players. The English-speaking mahjong world is missing out on so much good content just because of the language barrier.
Very informative! After watching your videos I finally reached my all time peak of adept!
Thanks for these videos. They really help building a strong basis for my games.
An important topic would be how to play towards the ending of a round, especially considering keiten and exhaustive draws. I don't really know how to judge if going for keiten is worth the risk of pushing certain tiles.
I have a notebook with notes from various mahjong books and online lessons. Your guides are always super valuable!
I'd really love to see more about a topic you've touched on both in this and other videos -- playing around the idea that mahjong isn't a 1-versus-3 game.
In this video, for instance, you talked about shifting haitei to the fourth place player to support them into potentially making the first place dealer kanburi into second place. In Mahjong Techniques Explained #4, you talked about having more options than just Push and Fold, and that there are also the options of Assist and Block. This is by far the most interesting part of mahjong to me and I'd love to hear more from you about the topic.
Fantastic video! Very informative and easy to understand, as usual.
After having a fellow player look at some of my games recently, I realized I had a problem: whenever I saw my haipai, unless there was a VERY obvious way to make a high-scoring open hand, I would almost always default to pursuing riichi. Going for riichi by default isn't _that_ bad, but I realized it was costing me a lot of flexibility. For reference, my call rate was hovering around 20% before this. I've since tried to think harder about calls, and to generally just call a bit more aggressively; so far I've actually found decent success with it.
That same player helped me understand why calling more is important (as well as when / how to do it), and a lot of what he mentioned matches up with the tips in this video, so I'm glad to see I'm on the right track!
Thank you for this comprehensive video. It would seem I still have a lot to learn about this game, but I’m so happy to see more content creators help to break the language barrier so people like me can learn more. If possible, I’d love to see a video about when and how to decide what yaku to go for in a given scenario, or maybe common pitfalls for newer players. Thank you very much once again, and have a great day!
Hello Xanxust! I love your educational content. Can you make a video regarding when to push, when to fold, when to play quick hands, when to play big hands?
@@kotoriminami2560 hello, thanks for the support! I've been thinking of working on such a video actly, maybe once I'm off work and have some free time
Thanks for the suggestion! I think it's a good video idea
Dont listen to this man nonsense. When you see a blue pon or a green chii, you have to click it, its a rule! Only click Skip if youre a chicken!
Thanks man, very informative 👍
I learned some neat things, thankya ^^
Love this vid!
“Kan is also not recommended” - not in mahjong with EY 😂