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🖐️ Four Fingers and a Thumb:

How to Visualize a Winning Hand

Have you ever looked at your mahjong tiles and thought, How do these ever fit together into a winning hand? Here’s a simple way to picture it: your hand is like your own hand: four fingers and one thumb.

✋ The Four Fingers = Your Melds

A meld is a set of three tiles.
You need four melds in total. Think of them as your four fingers. They form the structure and strength of your hand.

Each meld can be:

  • A Pung — three identical tiles (like 3 Red Dragons 🀄🀄🀄)
  • A Chow — three in a sequence, same suit (like 4-5-6 Bamboo 🎍🎍🎍)
  • A Kong — four identical tiles (optional but powerful!)

So, your four fingers are basically four groups of threes (or sometimes a four).

💡 Tip: When you draw a tile, always check if it helps you complete one of those “fingers.”
Do you now have a run? A triple? Or can you start one?

👍 The Thumb = Your Pair

Every winning hand also needs a pair, ie. two identical tiles.
That’s your thumb, the one that ties everything together and gives your hand its grip.

Without the thumb, the rest feels incomplete. Same in mahjong.

🀄 Putting It All Together

A standard winning hand = Four Fingers + One Thumb
→ 4 × 3 tiles (12) + 2 tiles (the pair) = 14 tiles total

That’s why every time you start your turn, you’ll have 13 tiles and draw one, hoping it’s the perfect piece that finishes your hand.

🌸 Try It Next Time You Play

As you arrange your tiles, hold out your hand for a second.
Look at your four fingers. Each one a meld.
And that little thumb? That’s your pair; the piece that gives you your winning “grip.”

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