"I need some strategies to improve my game!"
There are many valid strategies that can be used to play Mah-Jongg. Some strategies apply only to particular styles of Mah-Jongg, and some strategies apply across the board. Important: there is usually no single "best" or "right" strategy for a particular situation. Strategies must be adjusted depending on the situation (considering the probabilities, the other players, the length of the wall, the amount at stake, etc.). The skilled player always uses a flexible strategic approach.
How much is luck and how much is skill?
I have no idea how to determine how much is luck and how much is skill in mah-jongg. The games of Chess and Go are 0% luck and 100% skill. But there are random elements in mah-jongg (the order of tiles in the wall, which hands players are going for, the dice roll). Is mah-jongg 70% luck and 30% skill? Is it 50% luck and 50% skill? Sixty-forty? 42-58? Who can know?
What about different variants? There's a higher luck ratio in Japanese mah-jongg than in American mah-jongg, by design (Japanese rules add more random elements to increase the payments). But what's the ratio in any mah-jongg variant? How would you even measure such a question?
All I can tell you is: the more experienced/skilled player will win more often than less experienced players, but even the most highly skilled players are subject to the vagaries of chance.
Beginner Strategy (all variants)
General Strategy (all NON-American variants)
Chinese/HK/Western Strategy (specifics)
Japanese Strategy (specifics)
American Mah-Jongg Strategy (specifics)
Note: You can find much more information on American and Chinese Official strategy (and on etiquette and error-handling) in my book, The Red Dragon & The West Wind. Also see my strategy column.
General strategy pointers for BEGINNERS studying ANY form of mah-jongg:
o Don't grab the first discard that completes one of your sets. Many beginners think they are doing good if they're making lots of melds (Chows, Pungs, Kongs) -- they don't realize that melding is an onerous duty, not a sign of success! If you watch experienced players, you will see that they do not necessarily grab the first Pung opportunity that comes along, for several reasons:
b. It narrows the opportunities for the hand you are building. (If you don't understand this now, you'll figure it out very quickly.)
o Keep a Pair. It's harder to make a pair if you have only one tile than it is to make a Pung if you have a pair. So if you have a pair, don't be too quick to claim a matching tile to form a Pung.
o Have Patience. When first learning to play, it's typical to grab every opportunity to meld a Pung or Chow. In the early stages of a game, you should instead keep in mind that there are a lot of good tiles available for drawing from the Wall - and by not melding your tiles, you don't clue everyone as to what you're doing, and you stand a chance to get a Concealed Hand.
o Be Flexible. As you build your hand, be ready to abandon your earlier thinking about how to build it as you see what kind of tiles others are discarding. If you are playing Western Mah-Jongg with restrictions on winning hands, don't be too quick to form your only Chow; there will be other chances.
o Don't Let Someone Else Win. As much as you want to go out yourself, sometimes it's wiser to keep anybody else from winning. Especially, you don't want to "feed" a high-scoring hand. If a player has melded three sets of all one suit, that's especially dangerous (you might feed a Pure or Clean hand, and have to pay a high price); thus the player announces the danger when making a third meld in one suit.
o Watch the discards and watch the number of tiles in the Wall. As it approaches the end, the tension increases - and it's more important to be careful what you discard when there are fewer tiles remaining to be drawn. If the number of tiles in the Wall is getting low, don't discard any tiles which you do not see in the discard area.
Below you will find strategies written specifically for American, Japanese, Chinese, and other forms of mah-jongg.
NOTE: American mah-jongg is completely different from all other forms. So I refer to those other forms as "un-American" as a shorthand way of saying "forms of mah-jongg other than the American variety.".
General Strategies for "Un-American" Forms of Mah-Jongg
o The "1-4-7 rule" is a good playing strategy (for all forms of Mah-Jongg except American (style similar to NMJL) in which there are no "chows"). If the player to your right discards a 4, and you don't have another of those to discard, you /might/ be all right if you discard a 1 or a 7. Remember that these number sequences are key: 1-4-7, 2-5-8, 3-6-9. Between any two numbers in these sequences there can be an incomplete chow; if a player throws one number, then that player probably does not have a chow that would be completed by that number or the number at the other end. Discarding tiles IDENTICAL to what another player discards is always good, if you can. This 1-4-7 principle also applies to any five-in-a-row pattern (assuming the hand is otherwise complete - you have two complete sets and a complete pair, waiting to go out with a five-in-a-row pattern as shown by ** in the table below).
o Try to go out waiting for multiple tiles (not just one). Imagine that you have three complete sets and two pairs. Imagine that one pair is 2 Bams, and you draw a 3 Bam from the wall -- which tile do you discard now? In this situation, many experienced players will discard a 2 Bam, keeping 2-3. A two-way incomplete chow call is better than a two-pair call.
Learn to shape the hand into calling patterns that give you multiple chances to win, such as the following:
The neon sign above "Kye’s Tech Recovery" flickered, casting a rhythmic blue bruise over the cluttered workbench. Kye wasn't looking at the sign; he was staring at a tablet that had become a high-tech paperweight. It was a generic brand, powered by an Allwinner chipset , and it was hard-locked by a Factory Reset Protection (FRP) screen. The customer, an elderly man named Mr. Henderson, had looked devastated when he dropped it off. "It has the only photos of my late wife’s garden," he’d said, his voice thin. "I reset it because it was slow, but I can't remember the Google password. Three other shops told me to bin it." Kye knew why. Allwinner chips were the wild west of the tablet world—cheap, effective, but notoriously stubborn when the digital deadbolt was slid into place. The Search for the "Top" Kye didn't reach for the heavy-duty professional rigs first. He went to his private bookmarks, scrolling past the bloated, ad-ridden software that promised the world but only delivered malware. He was looking for the "Allwinner FRP Tool Top" —a legendary script whispered about in niche developer forums. It wasn't a "top" tool because it was famous; it was the "top" because it sat at the very peak of the exploit chain, bypassing the bootloader’s security handshake before the OS even had a chance to ask for a password. The Digital Heist The Connection : Kye soldered two tiny wires to the test points on the motherboard, putting the Allwinner chip into "FEL mode"—a state of digital vulnerability. The Injection : He ran the tool. The command line on his monitor began to dance with green text.
Allwinner FRP Tool — Overview & Guide What it is
Allwinner FRP Tool : software used to bypass or remove Factory Reset Protection (FRP) on devices with Allwinner SoCs (commonly low-cost Android tablets/phones). Typically used when a device is locked to a Google account after a reset.
Legal & safety note
Removing FRP on a device you do not own or lack explicit permission to service may be illegal. Use only on devices you own or have authorization to repair.
Common features
Detect Allwinner chipset and connected device in preloader/bootloader mode Read/write/flash firmware partitions (boot, recovery, userdata) Remove or reset Google account/FRP lock by patching relevant partitions or clearing account data Backup and restore NVRAM/IMEI and partition images Support for multiple Allwinner models and Android versions (depends on tool build) allwinner frp tool top
Typical workflow (prescriptive steps)
Backup: Make a full image backup of the device partitions (at minimum: boot, recovery, system, userdata, misc, and NVRAM) before any change. Charge: Ensure device battery >50% or keep it connected to power. Drivers: Install appropriate USB drivers for Allwinner devices on your PC (e.g., Zadig or vendor driver packages). Enter download/preloader mode: Power off device; connect USB while holding the correct button combo (often volume + or -) or connect and let driver detect “Allwinner USB” / “Preloader”. Launch tool: Run the Allwinner FRP Tool as administrator. Confirm the device is detected. Backup NVRAM/IMEI: Use the tool’s NVRAM or IMEI backup feature and save files externally. Remove FRP: Use the tool’s FRP or “Remove Google Account” option. Follow on-screen prompts. If that fails, alternative methods:
Flash a patched system or boot image with FRP removed. Wipe userdata/misc partitions cautiously if supported. The customer, an elderly man named Mr
Reboot & verify: Reboot device and confirm FRP bypassed; reconfigure or add a new Google account. Restore IMEI/NVRAM: If needed, restore from backup to preserve network functionality.
Common issues & fixes