Greetings and salutations from Bubbe, with
more true stories from the mahj table.
I'm going to make a confession to you, dear
readers. I got to play the 2019 card yesterday for the first time, and I was
almost cleaned out. We play with a four-dollar pie, and I walked away with a
quarter!
It wasn't for lack of trying. I had some good
ideas, but without Jokers, it's not easy to win. There was one hand where I was
dealt two of them, but otherwise it was pretty much a dry spell.
I was playing against my usual group, all of
whom are experienced players. We only ended up with one Wall game. I think that
says something about this card, that hands are easier to make. I expected this
when I noticed just how many hands use the 3-4 pattern, just pungs and kongs
and no pairs. Obviously it's easier to make a hand when you don't have to
achieve pairs, and can call for exposures. I sensed this most specifically in
the new Consecutive kongs with Dragon hand, which requires pungs of Flowers and
suit-matched Dragons. Without the challenge of achieving a pair of either of
those two coveted items, it is a very simple hand to achieve...if you have
Jokers.
No one went for Quint hands during our game,
and no one made a Singles and Pairs hand either. They were mainly
straightforward hands, a pair of Flowers with three consecutive kongs or the
first or second Consecutive Runs hand. Someone made the concealed 13579 hand.
Probably the most interesting, ambiguous
double exposure was kongs of 5 and 7 crak. I didn't know whether my opponent was going
for an Addition hand with “12,” a Consecutive Run of kongs of 5, 6, and 7 crak,
or (since my head wasn't completely in the new card yet) last year's 579
three-kong hand. I threw out two 1 craks, but in the end, it turned out that
she was collecting 6 craks, and she made mah jongg.
My own experience showed just how flexible the
card is. In my “best” (still losing) performance, I finished the Charleston
with two 9 cracks, one 9 bam and one 9 dot, a Flower, a North, two Souths, and
two Jokers, plus three random tiles from the optional “across.” My first
thought was to go for the Like Numbers/Winds and Dragons hand with two kongs of
9’s and pairs of Flowers, Norths, and Souths. I had exposed a kong of 9 craks
(including a Joker) when the third North went out, so THAT hand was scrubbed. I
was still able to go for the “regular” Like Numbers hand of three kongs of 9’s.
I didn't have enough Jokers to make it, unfortunately, but it certainly was an
easy switch.
I had trouble making decisions about the 2019
hands. Don't forget that there is an extra 2019 hand in the Winds and Dragons
section, as well as the “big” (75 cent) Singles and Pairs hand. There are
monochrome (single-suit), two- and three-suit options for 2019 hands. It is a
lot to keep straight: should you only collect in one suit, or all three? Should
you keep Winds? What about Dragons? Obviously, keep the Soaps because they make
your hand much more versatile. Flowers aren't required for several of the
hands, but they're indispensable for the first hand and the Dragon kong hand...and of course, the big hand.
Any of you who've read my book or played
against me know that I'm a sucker for a Soap. Since I'll never give
that up, I must train myself to make better decisions about the hands, going
forward. I'm going to practice making them by myself in the next week or two. I
plan to devote a whole column just to playing 2019 hands...stay tuned.
All over Facebook, people have been posting
how they've won five or six hands on the new card already... by now, the really
committed daily players may have won 20 different hands. I know my turn will
come around, at some point, and so will yours. Much of winning depends on
getting the right tiles at the right time. Remember Bubbe's most important lesson: luck favors the prepared mind. Do your best to learn and understand the
card, and the potential within your own tiles, so that if lucky tiles come to
you (an additional Joker, that Flower or Dragon, the tile you needed to
complete the “sum” in the Addition hand), you will know what to do!
As always, I'm happy to answer questions or
hear any comments you might want to share. You can contact me at bubbefischer@gmail.com
Talk to you soon!
Bubbe
No comments:
Post a Comment