- What is American mahjong, and how is it different from Chinese mahjong?
- American mahjong is a four-player tile game adapted from Chinese mahjong in the 1920s. The biggest difference is the National Mah Jongg League (NMJL) card, which lists the year's official winning hands. American play also uses jokers and a 152-tile set, while Chinese mahjong typically uses 144 tiles and no jokers.
- How many tiles are in an American mahjong set?
- A complete American mahjong set has 152 tiles: 108 suit tiles (bamboo, dots, characters), 16 winds, 12 dragons, 8 flowers, and 8 jokers. Most retail sets ship with 166 tiles to include blanks and spares.
- How many people do you need to play mahjong?
- American mahjong is designed for four players. Three-player variants exist, but the NMJL card and the Charleston assume a full table of four.
- What is the Charleston in American mahjong?
- The Charleston is a ritual exchange of three tiles at the start of every hand. The first Charleston passes right, across, then left. A second Charleston is optional and runs in the reverse order, followed by an optional 0-to-3-tile courtesy pass with the player across.
- Do I need the current NMJL card to play?
- Yes, for American play. The National Mah Jongg League publishes a new card each spring, and every legal winning hand for the year comes from that card. Without it, you cannot declare mahjong.
- What is the easiest way to learn mahjong as a beginner?
- Start by recognizing the tiles, then learn the vocabulary (pung, kong, pair, joker), then walk through a few hands on the NMJL card. Our free practice runs you through all of it in eight short chapters with a coached round at the end.
- How long does a game of American mahjong take?
- A single hand takes about 10–20 minutes. A full session of four rounds usually runs 1.5 to 2.5 hours, depending on table chatter.
- Can jokers be used for any tile?
- Jokers can substitute in pungs, kongs, and quints (groups of three or more identical tiles), but never in pairs, singles, or in NEWS and year hands. They can be exchanged off another player's exposure for the natural tile.