Mahjong Gokū Tenjiku
Players
0
Rating
4.5★
Categories
FC/NES
About
<h2>Overview</h2><figure data-align="right" data-size="small" data-img-src="https://www.giantbomb.com/a/uploads/original/2/23093/2751564-3473619246-Hzbb6.png" data-ref-id="1300-2751564" data-ratio="0.875" data-width="768" data-embed-type="image" style="width: 768px"><a class="fluid-height" style="padding-bottom:87.5%" href="https://www.giantbomb.com/a/uploads/original/2/23093/2751564-3473619246-Hzbb6.png" data-ref-id="1300-2751564"><img alt="No Caption Provided" src="https://www.giantbomb.com/a/uploads/scale_small/2/23093/2751564-3473619246-Hzbb6.jpg" srcset="https://www.giantbomb.com/a/uploads/original/2/23093/2751564-3473619246-Hzbb6.png 768w, https://www.giantbomb.com/a/uploads/scale_medium/2/23093/2751564-3473619246-Hzbb6.jpg 480w, https://www.giantbomb.com/a/uploads/scale_small/2/23093/2751564-3473619246-Hzbb6.jpg 320w" sizes="(max-width: 320px) 100vw, 320px" data-width="320"></a></figure><p>Mahjong GokÅ« Tenjiku is a <a href="https://www.giantbomb.com/mahjong/3015-6519/" data-ref-id="3015-6519">riichi mahjong</a> game developed and published by <a href="https://www.giantbomb.com/chat-noir/3010-6860/" data-ref-id="3010-6860">ChatNoir</a> for the <a href="/3do/3045-26/" data-ref-id="3045-26">3DO</a> on August 10, 1994, for the <a href="/super-nintendo-entertainment-system/3045-9/" data-ref-id="3045-9">Super Famicom</a> on August 19, 1994, for the <a href="/saturn/3045-42/" data-ref-id="3045-42">Sega Saturn</a> on November 22, 1994, for the <a href="/playstation/3045-22/" data-ref-id="3045-22">Sony PlayStation</a> on December 3, 1994, for the <a href="/pc-fx/3045-75/" data-ref-id="3045-75">PC-FX</a> on March 24, 1995, and for <a href="/nec-pc-9801/3045-112/" data-ref-id="3045-112">NEC PC-98</a> computers on June 30, 1995. It also received a <a href="/pc/3045-94/" data-ref-id="3045-94">Windows PC</a> version.</p><p>A sequel to the 1986 game<a href="/professional-mahjongg-gokuu/3030-33870/" data-ref-id="3030-33870"> Professional Mahjong GokÅ«</a>, Mahjong GokÅ« Tenjiku features a campaign mode where players choose between one of several protagonists from the classical Chinese novel <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journey_to_the_West" data-target="true" target="_blank" rel="noopener nofollow">Journey to the West</a> (<a href="/sun-wukong/3005-17461/" data-ref-id="3005-17461">GokÅ«</a>, <a href="/sha-wujing/3005-36796/" data-ref-id="3005-36796">GojÅ</a>, <a href="/pigsy/3005-7836/" data-ref-id="3005-7836">Hakkai</a>, and <a href="/shang-zan/3005-21473/" data-ref-id="3005-21473">SanzÅ</a>, each representing a different "save slot") as they make their way through their pilgrimage to <a href="/india/3035-882/" data-ref-id="3035-882">Tenjiku</a> while challenging various characters from the novel to matches to mahjong. Each group encountered has their own rule changes, and players rank up by winning against them.</p><p>The PS1 version later received an enhanced re-release on June 3, 1999, known as <a href="/mahjong-goku-tenjiku-99/3030-64878/" data-ref-id="3030-64878">Mahjong GokÅ« Tenjiku 99</a>. The game also received a sequel for the <a href="/playstation-2/3045-19/" data-ref-id="3045-19">PlayStation 2</a> a year later, known as <a href="/mahjong-goku-taisei/3030-64877/" data-ref-id="3030-64877">Mahjong GokÅ« Taisei</a>.</p><h2>Rule Settings</h2><p>All settings are enabled unless otherwise specified.</p><ul><li><strong>é£Ÿã„æ–么 (Kui-tanyao)</strong> - Allows the tanyao (no terminal or honor tile) yaku to be counted with an exposed hand.</li><li><strong>è£ãƒ‰ãƒ© (Uradora)</strong> - After winning a hand after declaring riichi, an additional dora tile is revealed.</li><li><strong>槓ドラ (Kandora)</strong> - After declaring kan, an additional dora tile is revealed.</li><li><strong>槓ウラ (Kan-ura)</strong> - An additional uradora is revealed for each kandora in play. Disabled by default.</li><li><strong>一発 (Ippatsu)</strong> - After declaring riichi, players can receive an additional yaku if they receive a winning tile within an uninterrupted set of opponent tile draws.</li><li><strong>一発失効 (Ippatsu-shikkÅ)</strong> - ???. Can be either discarded after (æ¨å¾Œ, default) or before (æ¨å‰).</li><li><strong>二家和 (Ryanchahou)</strong> - When two players declare ron at the same time on another player's discard, have that player pay for both players (rather than the player closest to them counter-clockwise). Disabled by default.</li><li><strong>二飜縛り (Ryanhan-shibari)</strong> - If a player has remained the dealer for five consecutive hands (with exhaustive draws and/or dealer wins), players must have a yaku with at least two-han to declare the next win.</li><li><strong>ä¸è´ç½° (Noten-batsu)</strong> - After an exhaustive draw, players without a tenpai hand must give penalty points to those with a tenpai hand.</li><li><strong>å—å ´ä¸è´ (Nanba-noten)</strong> - If a hand in the South round ends in an exhaustive draw with the dealer not in tenpai, either progress as normal (輪è˜, ronchan, default) or repeat the hand with the same dealer (連è˜, renchan).</li><li><strong>ドボン (Dobon)</strong> - Ends the match early once a player's points goes below zero.</li><li><strong>西入 (Sha-nyuu)</strong> - If the top player does not reach a certain point threshold by the end of the second round (South), the game plays a third round (West). Disabled by default, can be changed to 30,100 points, 33,100 points, or 35,100 points.</li><li><strong>自摸平和 (Tsumo-pinfu)</strong> - Allows the yaku Pinfu (all sequences with no additional fu other than a closed ron) to be counted on self-draw (by ignoring the yaku Menzenchin Tsumohou's fu value).</li><li><strong>三四連刻 (San-suu-renkÅ)</strong> - Allows two additional closed-hand yaku: the 2-han SanrenkÅ (three sequential triplets of the same suit) and the yakuman SuurenkÅ (four sequential triples of the same suit).</li><li><strong>大車輪 (Daisharin)</strong> - Players who form a closed hand of all sequential non-terminal pairs of the same suit receive a yakuman.</li><li><strong>å…«é€£è˜ (Paa-renchan)</strong> - Players who win their eighth consecutive hand receives an automatic yakuman on their eighth win.</li><li><strong>æ•°ãˆå½¹æº€ (Kazoe-yakuman)</strong> - Players whose hand has 13 han or more receives a yakuman, rather than a sanbaiman.</li><li><strong>二å€å½¹æº€ (Nibai-yakuman)</strong> - Allows certain yakuman hands to be worth double the points.</li><li><strong>七対å (Chiitoitsu)</strong> - Determines the fu value of the yaku Chiitoitsu (seven unique pairs), with either 25-fu (default) or 30-fu.</li><li><strong>副語平和 (Fuku-go-pinfu)</strong> - ???. Either 20-fu (default) or 30-fu.</li><li><strong>äºŒç›ƒå£ (RyanpÄ“kÅ)</strong> - Determines the han value of the yaku RyanpÄ“kÅ (two sets of doubled sequences), with either 3-han (default) or 2-han.</li><li><strong>馬 (Uma)</strong> - Applies an uma spread to the final score, with second place receiving the lower amount from third place and first place receiving the higher amount from fourth place. Can be 5-10 (default), 1-2, 1-3, or disabled entirely.</li><li><strong>æŒç‚¹ (Ji-ten)</strong> - Starting amount of points. Can be 25,000 (default), 26,000, 27,000 or 30,000.</li></ul>
Category
FC/NES
Type
Mini Game
Released
5/19/2025
Players
0
More FC/NES games
You might also like
Trending games other players are loving right now.