Wednesday, March 28, 2018

King and Queen Kong: Ambiguous Double Exposures


Greetings and salutations from your Bubbe, who’s been looking over the new card whenever I’m not chopping celery or polishing the silver…

If you read my previous article, you’d see my immediate enthusiasm for a few features of this year’s card. I like that the three Flowers aren’t a giveaway as to what hand you’re playing. I like that “knitted” hands are in three different places. I like that NEWS is back.

Another thing I love is the ambiguity. In my book, Searching for Bubbe Fischer, I encourage players to look at the card and critically assess which exposures won’t force them into a corner. It’s so important to have a backup plan, especially once they’ve made one (or more) exposures. 

Today I’m going to talk about double kong exposures. There are plenty of hands where you can make two kongs exposures and your opponents will STILL not be sure what you are playing. They will have a hard time deciding how to defend against two, three, or MORE hands….and best of all, even if your original target becomes unavailable (e.g. you don’t have a pair of Flowers), there’s generally an option that could be made with extra jokers.

Example:

You put out kongs of two consecutive numbers in the same suit, e.g. three- and four-craks. You could be playing

   111 222 3333 4444 or 111 222 3333 4444*

Or 

   FF 3333 4444 DDDD

Or

   FF 2222 3333 4444 or FF 3333 4444 5555
*Note: if you use ones and twos, or twos and threes, you will not be able to do this particular hand—otherwise, for any other exposure of two consecutive kongs in same suit, your hand could not be declared dead because you could be going for the top combination.


If you put out kongs of the same number in two suits, for instance 2222 and 2222, you could be playing

  FF 2018 2222 2222

Or

 FF 2222 DDDD 2222

Or

 FFF 2222 FFF 2222

You could claim that you were going to use Jokers to acquire enough Flowers, even if all the Flowers go out. It’s hard (but not impossible) for your hand to go dead.

Note that the above scenario also true of kongs of one’s and eight’s. If you put out kongs of threes, sixes, or nines, you could be playing a variation of

  FF 33 66 99 3333 3333

or either of the official Like Numbers hands, above.  Two different kongs of fours, fives, or sevens can only be one of those two Like Numbers hands.


Other fun ambiguous Double Kong exposures are with two kongs of the same suit, two numbers apart, e.g. one and three dot.

These could be part of:

                FF 1111 2222 3333

Or

                1111 222 3333 DDD

Or
 
                FF 1111 3333 5555**

**Note that every kong combination: 1 and 3, 3 and 5, 5 and 7, or 7 and 9 will be a variation on that 13579 hand, and there is an additional option for the 3 and 5 or 7 and 9; 2 and 4 or 4 and 6 will be part of the 2222 4444 6666 88 hand, and kongs of 6 and 8 will be part of 222 444 6666 8888

In this situation, even if ALL Flowers are discarded or used, you can still not be declared dead because of the “knit” hand scenario.


There are many other two-kong exposures that are ambiguous--look at the card and you'll find them in almost every section except Quints and Singles and Pairs!

I hope this little lesson will help you to think critically about backup plans and how the various hands can be switched, even after you’ve made one (or more) exposure(s)!

Back to the kitchen I go! Talk to you soon.

Bubbe Fischer





Tuesday, March 27, 2018

First impressions of the 2018 card


Greetings and salutations from your long lost Bubbe, who stepped away from simmering the brisket long enough to give you FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF THE NEW CARD!

Boy, oh boy, you’re gonna love it.

Off the top—the basic patterns this year are 22334 and 3344—that means ascending pairs, pungs, and kongs shows up in many places as does  AAA BBB CCCC DDDD. Also—big shock—the addition hand this year is “12,” in one or three suits, for 3-9, 4-8, and 5-7 combinations.

To be fair, however, this is an Agatha Christie card—full of twists and turns. Just when you think you understand the 3344 pattern, they’ve tricked you! The “knit hand” Consecutive Run hand (AAAA BBB CCCC DDD) is back—note that the “DDD” really DOES mean “dragon”—and note that it’s kongs on either side of the pung, with a pung of matching dragon. The fun surprise is that it shows up again in the 13579 section: 1111 333 5555 DDD or 5555 777 9999 DDD and in 369: 3333 666 9999 DDD

More new and interesting twists: THREE FLOWERS (a pung) is a thing again, but in a new and better way—it’s not just for Like Numbers anymore. Although the opposite Wind kongs/Flower pungs hand is gone, the Like Numbers hand (two Kongs of a number in different suits and two pungs of Flowers) still exists. In addition, a Flower pung (or two!) shows up unexpectedly in 2468, 13579, and 369. You won’t be able to tell from one exposure, what someone is playing, or even if they will need more Flowers!

Speaking of twists, turns, and Flowers: sometimes a kong of Dragons is accompanied by a pung of Flowers; sometimes by a pair of Flowers; sometimes by a kong of Flowers (well, only if it’s Soaps, in the 2018 section). 

Another thing that kind of blew me away, on first glance: there is a weird variation on Like Numbers in the 2018 section! You can make 2018 with two opposite suit kongs of ones, twos OR eights.

Singles and Pairs almost perfectly matches what I say in my lectures: each SP hand is basically a “mini” version of a different section of the card. There’s a Consecutive Run SP hand, a 2468, a 13579, a 369—you’ll see. Nothing earth-shattering in that section, and in fact, the 60 cent hand is back, to many people’s chagrin. We want the big payout!

Other big payouts (the Quint section)—kind of meh, this year, to be honest. I wasn’t blown away by any of them. The hand that I love—Quints of Winds and any number tile, plus a kong of dragons, is back. The other three hands aren’t that special, in my opinion.

As for old favorites:

NEWS is back, for those who have missed it—it’s in the closed 2018 hand, as well as a Winds/Dragons hand. An interesting point about that Winds/Dragon hand: it’s the only one on the card that uses TWO DRAGON KONGS.

The Consecutive Run “old reliable” Kong/Dragon hand is back with a variation: only two Flowers, with kongs of consecutive numbers and matching dragon. There’s a fun twist: you can also just do kongs of three consecutive numbers, and skip the dragons! That’s basically a single-suit version of the junk hand (three consecutive kongs in different suits), which also is back.

As for “illegal” exposures: the only “typical” exposures that do not exist on this card are pungs of 9’s and Winds. All single Kongs are legal, as are quints of any Wind or numbered tile.  

I will certainly write more, going forward, about ambiguous exposures and tricky variations on hands, but wanted to give you some quick feedback.

Enjoy your holiday weekend. The card’s coming, but you’ve got the inside scoop. If you want to send me your impressions when you get YOUR card, email me at bubbefischer@gmail.com

Talk to you soon!

Bubbe