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Double Yakuman is a traditional mahjong game for Game Boy.
A low-budget mahjong game released for the Super Famicom in 1993, it parodies the classic anime and manga series "Saint Seiya". It follows typical Japanese mahjong rules, although many characters can perform special moves. The game supports the Super Famicom Mouse peripheral.
Suffer the Ultimate Penalty for your Chicken Hands as you square off against Uncle Chen, Auntie Loo and Dennis Yung in the centuries-old tile game of Mahjong!
Mahjong game published by IGS in 1992. It is based on a Mahjong-themed manga with the same name.
A Mahjong simulator that allows players to create their own mahjong player and play games against two, three, or four CPU opponents.
Japanese comedian George Tokoro's first mahjong game of many.
An unlicensed adult mahjong game for the Mega Drive.
A one-on-one Mahjong simulator for the Super Famicom from I'Max.
A compilation of the two "strip" installments of the arcade Super Real Mahjong games, with extra modes.
Sachen's second Taiwan-rules mahjong game.
A mahjong game for Game Gear, by Namco(t).
Jantaku Boy is a mahjong game from Namco.
A Japan-exclusive falling-block tile-matching puzzle arcade game by Data East, where players form melds of mahjong tiles and attempt to form high-scoring mahjong hands.
Eroge mahjong game developed by Nichibutsu in 1991.
A tile stacking and matching game for Famicom.
The second Janou Touryuumon by Game Arts, a series of mahjong games intended to teach players how to be experts. It was ported to the Japanese Mega Drive by Sega and lost its numeral in the process.
An arcade Mahjong game.
A Mastermind puzzle game variant once accessible exclusively through the Mega Drive's MegaNet Game Toshokan service.
Arcade version of the popular mahjong solitare series with a unique quest mode and a "Paradise" mode with comely lasses.
An adult themed arcade Mahjong game.
A pack of casual games intended to help the appeal of the company's then-new Windows 3.0 operating system. It's best known for an officially-licensed port of Tetris and for the first eppearance of the Windows version of Minesweeper.
The sequel to the 1986 mahjong solitaire game Shanghai, improving on the original formula by adding multiple tile layouts, custom tile appearances, and a new versus tile-based mode known as Dragon's Eye.
A Game Gear-exclusive mahjong game from Arc System Works and Sega.
An entry in the Jangō series, exclusively for the Famicom. While it has the most in common with the first game, Jangō 1, it is overall unique to any other entry.
The sequel to Victor Interactive Software's Jangō.
A mahjong game for Famicom by Nichibutsu.
A four-player riichi mahjong game for the Mega Drive, notable for including online multiplayer via the Sega Mega Modem peripheral.
The first in the Famimaga Disk series, Hong Kong is a variation of traditional mahjong solitaire.
A collection of card and puzzle games for Game Boy and MSX.
A Mahjong game for the Sega Mega Drive released exclusively in Japan. Developed by Whiteboard (later known as Megasoft)
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