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Difference between revisions of "Richi Mahjong Parlour (FOTS)"

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(Created page with " {{TWS2 Building|image=Image:Richi Mahjong Parlour FOTS.png |Chain=Business Type |Requires='''Buildings''':<li>[[Gambling Den (F...")
 
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  |Spawned Defence Forces=-
 
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  |Basic Building Statistics=<li>Cost: 3000</li><li>+1000 to wealth generated by trade in this province</li><li>+3 to happiness in this province</li><li>Enables recruitment of Rank 1 geisha</li><li>+2 per turn to town growth from trade within this province</li>
 
  |Basic Building Statistics=<li>Cost: 3000</li><li>+1000 to wealth generated by trade in this province</li><li>+3 to happiness in this province</li><li>Enables recruitment of Rank 1 geisha</li><li>+2 per turn to town growth from trade within this province</li>
  |Clan Effects=-}}
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  |Clan Effects=-1 to modernisation (clan development)}}
  
 
==Description==
 
==Description==

Revision as of 04:47, 7 September 2012

Richi Mahjong Parlour (FOTS)
File:Richi Mahjong Parlour FOTS.png
Chain Business Type
Requires Buildings:
  • Gambling Den
  • Resources:
  • Tea
  • Enables Buildings:
  • Yakuza Office
  • Spawned Defence Forces -
    Basic Building Statistics
  • Cost: 3000
  • +1000 to wealth generated by trade in this province
  • +3 to happiness in this province
  • Enables recruitment of Rank 1 geisha
  • +2 per turn to town growth from trade within this province
  • Clan Effects -1 to modernisation (clan development)
    See main article; FotS Buildings


    Description

    The twittering of sparrows can be costly.

    This hotbed of criminality and gambling improves happiness in the province. It also gives geishas a chance to practice their skills, and so adds experience to any recruited here.

    Mahjong ("Sparrow Tiles" in the original Chinese) looks complicated, but is actually remarkably simple in principle, and ruthless in practice. Played with 136 ivory tiles, four players try to form matching groups of four tiles until "Mahjong" is called, gambling on the result as they do so. Based on an older Chinese card game, Ma-Taio, the Japanese embraced the game and made it a little more cutthroat. Richi Mahjong adds a winner-takes-all element that makes the game more of a race to victory. While gambling is now illegal in Japan, Richi Mahjong was once the perfect game for high-stakes excitement.