u/Available-Judgment54

Learn every tile in Blood Battle Mahjong — Wan, Tiao, Tong — with real tile images and beginner explanations

If you have never played mahjong before, the very first thing you need to do is learn to read the tiles. Unlike playing cards, mahjong tiles do not have a universal design — they come in suits and ranks that feel unfamiliar at first glance. The good news: Blood Battle Mahjong uses only 3 suits and no special tiles, making it one of the most beginner-friendly mahjong variants to learn visually. Once you know the 27 unique tile types, you know the entire tile set.

This guide walks through every single tile in the game — what it looks like, how to recognize it, and why it matters for building a winning hand. Every concept is illustrated with actual tile images so you can connect the visual to the name immediately.

ℹ️ What You Will Learn

By the end of this guide, you will be able to identify all 27 unique tile types across the 3 suits, understand the difference between terminals and simples, and recognize sequences, triplets, pairs, and Kongs at a glance. These are the fundamental building blocks of every hand in Blood Battle Mahjong.

1. The Complete Tile Set: 108 Tiles

The Blood Battle Mahjong tile set contains exactly 108 tiles. There are 3 suits — Wan, Tiao, and Tong — each with 9 ranks (1 through 9), and each unique tile appears exactly 4 times:

Suit English Name Chinese Name Ranks Copies Each Total
Wan Characters 1–9 4 36
Tiao Bamboo 1–9 4 36
Tong Circles / Dots 1–9 4 36
Grand Total 108

That is it. No wind tiles (East, South, West, North). No dragon tiles (Red, Green, White). No flower tiles. Blood Battle strips mahjong down to its essential core — 3 suits, 9 ranks each. This is actually one of the reasons Blood Battle is so popular: the absence of honor tiles removes a lot of memorization overhead and keeps strategic focus tightly on suit composition and set building.

💡 Why 4 Copies of Every Tile?

Having exactly 4 identical copies of every tile is what makes triplets and four-of-a-kind (Kong) possible. It also creates important strategic information: if you have already seen 3 copies of a tile discarded by others, you know the 4th copy is either in the wall or in someone's hand — and it cannot be discarded again. Counting copies is a key skill as you advance.

2. The Wan Suit — Characters

The Wan suit is named after the Chinese character (wàn), meaning "ten thousand." Each Wan tile displays large, bold Chinese numerals in its center. Even if you have never studied Chinese, you will quickly recognize the Wan suit on sight — the prominent character design makes it visually distinct from both Tiao and Tong.

Complete Wan suit: 1 Wan through 9 Wan

https://preview.redd.it/cxkhj61vryyg1.png?width=898&format=png&auto=webp&s=8b4b23bd0f120bd71a37b0d914d2f63daa8f6fcd

Here is what to look for when identifying Wan tiles:

  • Every Wan tile has a large central Chinese character — this is the most reliable visual marker
  • The rank number is also shown in smaller form at the top of the tile (usually in red or black numerals)
  • The suit character often appears below or alongside the rank character
  • 1 Wan and 9 Wan are the terminals of this suit — they have fewer options for forming sequences
  • 5 Wan sits in the center of the suit — it is the most flexible tile, able to connect in either direction

Wan Tiles by Range

Let us look at the Wan tiles in three groups to make their visual progression clear:

https://preview.redd.it/rrz3yvhsmzyg1.png?width=910&format=png&auto=webp&s=7c80e0d2bd9642df92b08b02c5dd000b7a62732c

3. The Tiao Suit — Bamboo

Tiao tiles show clusters of bamboo sticks arranged in various configurations. The rank corresponds to the number of bamboo segments displayed on the tile. The Tiao suit tends to have a predominantly green visual design, making it easy to separate from Tong (which uses blue and red tones).

Complete Tiao suit: 1 Tiao through 9 Tiao

https://preview.redd.it/cgu6d9vttyyg1.png?width=900&format=png&auto=webp&s=aec9c6401f76f0da0ab2d115fa04bc555c83a2bc

Tips for recognizing Tiao tiles quickly:

  • 1 Tiao looks completely different from all other Tiao tiles — instead of bamboo sticks, it typically shows a bird or a single large ornate design. This is a traditional mahjong feature, not a typo. Once you know this, you will never misread 1 Tiao again
  • 2 Tiao through 9 Tiao show progressively more bamboo segments in vertical arrangements
  • The green color scheme is the fastest way to identify Tiao at a glance
  • When in doubt, look for the character on the tile face

https://preview.redd.it/cgt5scfvmzyg1.png?width=1144&format=png&auto=webp&s=980e2b25800882e04fa7f62f6bfb2448dc9ed5b8

4. The Tong Suit — Circles / Dots

Tong tiles display circular dot patterns. The rank corresponds to the number of circles on the tile. Tong is often the easiest suit for new Western players to learn quickly — counting dots is immediately intuitive. The visual arrangement of dots follows consistent geometric patterns that your eye will learn to recognize without counting.

Complete Tong suit: 1 Tong through 9 Tong

https://preview.redd.it/2p98pne1uyyg1.png?width=906&format=png&auto=webp&s=2052eb6b3643322a82fe4d2645a0e7fa78d51a40

Tips for recognizing Tong tiles:

  • 1 Tong is a single large circle filling most of the tile face — unmistakable
  • 2 Tong shows two circles in a vertical column
  • 4 Tong shows a 2×2 grid of circles
  • 9 Tong shows a 3×3 grid of 9 circles — the most visually complex tile in the suit
  • The character appears on most Tong tile designs to confirm the suit

https://preview.redd.it/s8rmudrzmzyg1.png?width=1006&format=png&auto=webp&s=5d2038b54a3303231453fdebb465e2dae3229522

5. Terminals vs. Simples

Within every suit, tiles are divided into two important categories based on their rank: terminals and simples. Understanding this distinction is critical because it directly affects which tiles are easiest to use and which ones you should consider discarding early.

Category Ranks Tiles in the Game Sequence Flexibility
Terminals (yāo jiǔ) 1 and 9 only 1 Wan, 9 Wan, 1 Tiao, 9 Tiao, 1 Tong, 9 Tong (6 unique tiles) Can only form one sequence each
Simples (zhōngzhāng) 2 through 8 All 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 in all 3 suits (21 unique tiles) Can form sequences in multiple directions

Why Terminals Are Harder to Use

A sequence requires 3 consecutive tiles of the same suit. Consider a middle tile like 5 Wan — it can participate in three different sequences: 3-4-5, 4-5-6, or 5-6-7. That gives you many paths to complete a set. Now consider 1 Wan — it can only appear in the sequence 1-2-3. And 9 Wan can only appear in 7-8-9. This severely limits their utility when isolated.

https://preview.redd.it/d4iqdgm2nzyg1.png?width=1140&format=png&auto=webp&s=2a6ed6806d3c88b2b4eaa5dd028e08a152d4e14b

The practical implication: if you hold an isolated terminal (a 1 or 9 with no adjacent tiles of the same suit in your hand), it is usually the weakest tile you have. An isolated 1 Wan requires you to draw both 2 Wan and 3 Wan to complete a sequence around it. Compare that to an isolated 5 Wan, which could complete a sequence by drawing any one of several tiles: 3, 4, 6, or 7 Wan depending on what you already hold.

💡 Beginner Discard Rule of Thumb

When unsure what to discard during the early game, isolated terminals (lone 1s and 9s with no adjacent same-suit neighbors) are almost always your first candidates. They have the fewest connections, are hardest to use in sequences, and are unlikely to be the tile an opponent is waiting for.

6. What Is a Sequence ?

sequence (shùnzi) is a set of 3 consecutive tiles from the same suit. Sequences are the most common type of set in Blood Battle Mahjong. You need 4 sets to win (some or all of which can be sequences), plus 1 pair.

Critical rule: sequences must use tiles from the same suit only. You cannot mix suits. Also, in Blood Battle Mahjong, you cannot claim another player's discard to form a sequence (there is no Chi / Chow). Sequences can only be built from tiles you draw yourself from the wall.

Five Sequence Examples

https://preview.redd.it/r2jmo8u6nzyg1.png?width=1092&format=png&auto=webp&s=ebeeae317fd4246aa489abc74001fe417b399c10

⚠️ No Cross-Suit Sequences

You cannot form a sequence using tiles from different suits. 2 Wan + 3 Tiao + 4 Tong is NOT a valid set, even though the ranks are consecutive. All three tiles in a sequence must belong to the same suit.

7. What Is a Triplet ?

triplet (kèzi) is a set of 3 identical tiles — same suit, same rank. Any tile in the game can form a triplet. Since there are 4 copies of every tile, you can always collect 3 copies of any tile (depending on what is available in the wall and what opponents have held).

A winning hand built entirely of triplets (and no sequences) has a special name: Peng Peng Hu , worth 2 fan — double the base payout. This is one of the most satisfying hands to build when your tiles align.

Three Triplet Examples

https://preview.redd.it/omsiw2h9nzyg1.png?width=526&format=png&auto=webp&s=52b2096f5224f7c1617ce158f218a7d6de5314e4

How do you collect triplets? Two ways:

  1. Draw them yourself: you already hold 2 copies of a tile and draw the 3rd from the wall
  2. Declare Pong: when any opponent discards a tile and you hold 2 copies, you can call "Pong" to claim that discard and reveal the completed triplet as an open meld on the table

ℹ️ Pong Makes Triplets Easier to Complete

Because you can claim any opponent's discard to form a triplet via Pong, triplets are generally easier to complete than sequences. This is especially useful when you are holding a pair and waiting for the 3rd copy — you only need any of the other 3 players to discard it.

8. What Is a Pair ?

pair is exactly 2 identical tiles — same suit, same rank. Every standard winning hand in Blood Battle Mahjong requires exactly one pair, known as the "eyes" (jiàng) of the hand. The pair completes the 14-tile hand structure: 4 sets × 3 tiles each + 1 pair × 2 tiles = 14 tiles total.

Any tile can be the pair. There is no restriction — a pair of 1 Wan, a pair of 9 Tiao, or a pair of 5 Tong are all equally valid. The pair in your hand is often one of the last things you decide — you build your 4 sets first, and whatever tile you hold 2 copies of without a better use becomes your pair.

https://preview.redd.it/bdvgucgdnzyg1.png?width=700&format=png&auto=webp&s=badee6b9976282f5acdb317560f4eda1f044c3bd

9. What Is a Kong ?

Kong — sometimes called a "quad" — happens when you collect all 4 copies of the same tile. A Kong counts as one set in your winning hand (like a super-triplet), and it comes with a valuable bonus: you draw an extra tile from the wall after declaring a Kong.

There are multiple ways a Kong can happen:

  • Concealed Kong : you draw the 4th copy of a tile you already hold 3 of — entirely from your own draws
  • Open Kong : you declare Pong on an opponent's discard (making an open triplet), then later draw the 4th copy from the wall
  • Added Kong : you already have an open Pong on the table, and you draw the 4th copy, adding it to your existing meld

https://preview.redd.it/e8455trfnzyg1.png?width=970&format=png&auto=webp&s=9da2ba30a18e76e408d9eda830714e04eecebfd2

💡 Kong Strategy

Declaring a Kong is not always the right move. Yes, you get a bonus draw — but you also reveal information to opponents about what tiles you hold. If your hand is very close to winning, weigh the bonus draw against the strategic information cost before declaring.

10. Putting It All Together: Hand Structure

Now that you know the tile types and the 4 building blocks (sequences, triplets, pairs, Kongs), let us see how they combine into a complete winning hand.

The standard Blood Battle winning hand has exactly 14 tiles: 4 sets + 1 pair.

Complete hand: [2-3-4 Tiao] + [5-6-7 Tiao] + [1-1-1 Tiao triplet] + [7-8-9 Tiao] + [4-4 Tiao pair] — single suit =

https://preview.redd.it/mb1jmrfknzyg1.png?width=1382&format=png&auto=webp&s=e378cf5ccfe2ce196440cd15116cffdd03435353

The other valid winning structure is 7 Pairs — exactly 7 pairs of identical tiles, worth 2 fan:

7 Pairs winning hand: seven pairs of Wan tiles — worth 2 fan

https://preview.redd.it/0f5izcpmnzyg1.png?width=1394&format=png&auto=webp&s=0d35f6a7148aecc3a4a32eafa6732038fafe054e

11. Reading the Discard Pile

You can only see your own tiles and any tiles that have been revealed through discards or open Pong/Kong declarations. The discard pile is a critical source of information. Here is what to watch for:

  • Counting copies: If you have seen 3 copies of a tile already discarded, you know the 4th copy is still live — in someone's hand or in the wall. If all 4 copies have been discarded, that tile is dead
  • Safe tiles: A tile recently discarded by an opponent is generally safer to discard yourself — they already passed on it
  • Suit focus reading: If an opponent keeps discarding Wan tiles, they are probably not building a Wan hand — their focus is on Tiao and/or Tong

ℹ️ Reading Discard Patterns

After a few games, you will naturally start tracking the discard pile without thinking about it. Pay attention to what tiles disappeared early — those are tiles your opponents do not want, which tells you about their hand composition. If nobody is discarding 5 Tong, that tile might be in high demand.

12. Tile Frequency and Its Importance

Because there are exactly 4 copies of every tile, and 4 players draw from the same wall, tiles become progressively rarer as the game goes on:

  • Early in the game, most tiles are still available — you have more time to wait for key draws
  • Late in the game, with few tiles left in the wall, you must assess whether the tile you need is still realistically available
  • If you hold 2 copies of a tile and want a 3rd for a triplet, there are 2 copies remaining — your Pong claim on a discard is a valid strategy

💡 Track Your Void Suit

In Blood Battle Mahjong, you must declare one suit as your "void suit" — a suit your winning hand will contain zero tiles from. Once you have declared, say, Tong as your void suit, discard all Tong tiles as fast as possible. Holding void suit tiles when the wall is empty is a penalty called the Flower Pig.

Wan

The Characters suit. Tiles display large Chinese numerals. Ranks 1–9, 4 copies each, 36 tiles total.

Tiao

The Bamboo suit. Tiles display bamboo stick cluster patterns. Ranks 1–9. Important: 1 Tiao often shows a bird design, not bamboo sticks.

Tong

The Circles / Dots suit. Tiles display circular dot patterns. Ranks 1–9. Usually the easiest suit for beginners to count.

Terminal

Rank 1 or rank 9 tiles in any suit. They have only one valid sequence direction and are harder to use when isolated. Six terminal tiles total across the 3 suits.

Simple

Ranks 2 through 8. These tiles have the most flexibility for forming sequences. The backbone of most winning hands.

Sequence

Three consecutive tiles of the same suit. Example: 4-5-6 Tiao. Cannot mix suits. Cannot be formed by claiming a discard in Blood Battle (no Chi rule).

Triplet

Three identical tiles — same suit, same rank. Example: three 7 Tiao. Can be formed by claiming a discard via Pong.

Kong

All 4 copies of the same tile. Counts as one set and grants a bonus draw from the wall. Three types: concealed, open, added.

Pair

Two identical tiles — the 'eyes' of a winning hand. Every standard winning hand requires exactly one pair.

Pong

A declaration to claim an opponent's discard to complete a triplet. The triplet becomes an open (visible) meld on the table.

7 Pairs

A special winning hand consisting of exactly 7 pairs of identical tiles, totaling 14 tiles. Worth 2 fan.

Flower Pig

A penalty triggered when you still hold tiles from your declared void suit when the wall runs out. Avoid by discarding void suit tiles aggressively.

FAQ

Q1. How many tiles are in a Blood Battle Mahjong set?

108 tiles total. There are 3 suits (Wan, Tiao, Tong), each with 9 ranks (1–9), and 4 copies of each unique tile: 3 × 9 × 4 = 108. Blood Battle does not use wind tiles, dragon tiles, or flower tiles — it is a clean 3-suit game.

Q2. What is the difference between Wan, Tiao, and Tong?

They are three different suits, each ranked 1 through 9. Wan (Characters) tiles show large Chinese numerals. Tiao (Bamboo) tiles show bamboo stick clusters — 1 Tiao uniquely looks like a bird. Tong (Circles) tiles show dot patterns you count. All three suits work identically in the rules: you can form sequences and triplets within any suit.

Q3. What are terminal tiles, and why should I discard them early?

Terminal tiles are rank 1 and rank 9 in any suit. They matter because they have fewer sequence options than middle tiles. A rank 5 tile can form three different sequences (3-4-5, 4-5-6, 5-6-7). A rank 1 tile can only ever appear in 1-2-3. An isolated terminal with no adjacent same-suit tiles in your hand has very limited potential and is usually the best early discard.

Q4. Can I form a sequence using tiles from different suits?

No. A sequence must use 3 consecutive tiles from the same suit. You cannot mix Wan, Tiao, and Tong in one sequence. For example, 3 Wan + 4 Tiao + 5 Tong is not a valid set, even though the ranks are consecutive.

Q5. What is a Kong and when should I declare one?

A Kong is when you hold all 4 identical copies of a tile. Declaring a Kong reveals those tiles as a set and earns you a bonus draw from the wall. However, it also tells your opponents exactly what tiles you hold. If your hand is close to winning, weigh the bonus draw against the information you reveal before declaring.

Q6. What is the 7 Pairs hand?

7 Pairs is a special winning hand that uses 7 pairs of identical tiles instead of the standard 4 sets + 1 pair structure. It is worth 2 fan (double the base payout). All 14 tiles must be in pairs — no sequences or triplets.

Q7. Why does 1 Tiao look completely different from the other Tiao tiles?

This is a traditional mahjong design feature. In many tile sets, 1 Tiao shows a bird or an ornate single bamboo design instead of a simple bamboo stick count. This is not an error — it is conventional across most Chinese mahjong sets. Once you know this, 1 Tiao is actually easy to identify because it stands out so clearly.

reddit.com
u/Available-Judgment54 — 19 days ago

After learning the rules of Sichuan Blood Battle Mahjong, I spent a lot of sessions making the same mistakes. Here's what I wish someone had told me from the start:

1. Clear your void suit in the first 3 turns, no exceptions. Every turn you hold void tiles is a wasted draw slot. Discard all void tiles in turns 1–3. Yes, even if one of them "looks useful."

2. Use the tile exchange to establish your void instantly. Give all tiles from your intended void suit in the exchange. You arrive at turn 1 already voided — zero clearing work.

3. Pick the void suit with worst connectivity, not fewest tiles. Three isolated tiles (1-5-9) are easier to clear than three connected tiles (3-4-5 partial sequence). Count connectivity, not just quantity.

4. Prefer two-sided waits over one-tile waits. Holding 4-5 (waiting for 3 or 6) gives you 8 outs. Holding 4-6 (waiting for 5 only) gives you 4 outs. More outs = faster wins.

5. Don't Pong tiles from your void suit... they're discards. If you declared Tiao void, an opponent discarding Tiao is not relevant to you. Never Pong into your void.

6. If you're still 3+ shanten by turn 8, simplify your hand goal. Ambitious hands that never reach tenpai score nothing. A modest 1-fan hand you complete beats a 5-fan dream you don't.

RealMahjong can teach you how to play mahjong

What's the strategy mistake you made most when you first started?

reddit.com
u/Available-Judgment54 — 20 days ago

How to play Blood Battle Mahjong — complete rules in plain English

I've seen a lot of "how to play mahjong" posts but most cover Riichi or American rules. Here's Blood Battle, the dominant variant in mainland China, explained step by step.

**The basics:**

- 4 players, 108 tiles (3 suits × 9 ranks × 4 copies)

- Deal 13 tiles to each player

- Exchange 3 tiles with another player (direction rotates each round)

- Declare which suit you are voiding — you cannot win using those tiles

- Take turns drawing and discarding until someone wins

**Winning hand structure:**

4 complete sets + 1 pair = 14 tiles total

- Sets are either sequences (3 consecutive ranks, same suit) or triplets (3 identical tiles)

- The pair is your "eyes" — 2 identical tiles

- All winning tiles must come from your non-void suits

**Key rules that differ from other variants:**

- **No chi (chow)** — you cannot claim discards to form sequences. Sequences must be drawn from the wall.

- **Pong** — claim any player's discard to form a triplet (three of a kind). This exposes the set.

- **Kong** — four of a kind. Various types with different payout effects.

- **The round continues after the first winner** — other players keep playing until they win or the wall runs out. This is the "Blood Battle" mechanic.

**The end:**

- If the wall runs out, players who were in tenpai collect from those who weren't.

- If you're holding tiles from your declared void suit at the end — you pay everyone a penalty (called "Flower Pig" ).

Full detailed rules: [realmahjong.ai/guides/how-to-play-mahjong](https://realmahjong.ai/guides/how-to-play-mahjong)

reddit.com
u/Available-Judgment54 — 21 days ago

If you're coming from Japanese Riichi, Sichuan Mahjong's tile set feels surprisingly simple. Here's the full breakdown:

**The 3 suits (36 tiles each = 108 total):**

- **Wan (万)** — characters, ranks 1–9, 4 copies each

- **Tiao (条)** — bamboo sticks, ranks 1–9, 4 copies each

- **Tong (筒)** — circles, ranks 1–9, 4 copies each

**That's it. No wind tiles. No dragon tiles. No flowers.**

This is intentional in the Sichuan variant — removing honor tiles makes the game faster and shifts the strategy entirely toward suit management. Since there are no wind/dragon tiles to meld, every tile is part of a sequence or triplet set.

**Why this matters for strategy:**

- The void suit mechanic (choose one suit you can't win with) only works because all tiles are numbered 1–9. You can always evaluate "which suit do I need least?"

- Every draw is predictable — you know exactly what's in the deck. With 56 tiles left after dealing, probability math is clean and learnable.

**The tile exchange:**

Before each round, you pass 3 tiles (same suit) to another player and receive 3 back. This is only possible because tiles are all numbered — you're swapping suit tiles, not wildcards.

What version do you usually play — with or without honor tiles?

reddit.com
u/Available-Judgment54 — 22 days ago