Разработчик: Zoo Corporation
Описание
"School Girls Edition" for "Mahjong Pretty Girls Battle" has now appeared!
An extraordinary collection of Pretty School Girls is waiting for you!
The heated struggle to determine the world's top School Mahjong girl is about to begin!
■Brand new "KAWAII" cute school girls gathered for a hot Mahjong battle!
23 different sexy girls to choose from!An extraordinary collection of Pretty Girls is waiting for you!
■Hear their sexy voices in heated Mahjong battles!
Voices of all 23 girls are included.Squealing in ecstasy when they win, crying in sadness when they don't succeed.
Audio enjoyment for your gaming pleasure.
■Authentic Japanese Mahjong rules
Including settings for some famous local rule variants.The Pretty School Girls will help you practice Japan's most famous game.
*This game is character replaced version of "Mahjong Pretty Girls Battle".
*This game is an authentic Mahjong game. (No undressing or nudity is included in the game.)
*Characters and character images used under license from their respective owners.
*The game is single player only with additional AI players for authentic Mahjong play.
Поддерживаемые языки: english, japanese
Системные требования
Windows
- OS *: Windows 7 / 8 / 8.1
- Processor: 1GHz
- Memory: 1 GB RAM
- Graphics: DirectX compatible
- DirectX: Version 9.0c
- Storage: 500 MB available space
- Sound Card: DirectX compatible
Отзывы пользователей
OMG! The last time I played this game was on 07.10.2015! And I still have no idea how to play it LMAO
EDIT (31.03.2024): After 9 years, finally, a few days ago I started learning Riichi Mahjong and playing this game. I still don't know very much lol.
EDIT (23.07.2024): Redownloaded just to complete all the girls' challenges, and what I saw is too cruel... The game DOESN'T SAVE YOUR DATA ON CLOUD, nothing, not challenges, not records, not stats, NOTHING, so be careful before buying this, if you are an avid statistics fan like me! Luckily, I always save my stats manually either on my PC or virtually.
I've had a lot of fun with this. There are no tutorials for people who don't know how to play, so that's a minus, but if you already know and just want a simple mahjong game with the occasional pretty lady, then it's a good purchase.
If my time in this game doesn't speak for itself then let me convince you to get this game.
The Mahjong Pretty Girls Battle games is the only riichi mahjong available on Steam. Initially I was repulsed by the nsfw theme, the characters have diverse personalities and looks that oddly start to grow on you.
Although I do reccomend you get this game, THIS GAME IS NOT SUITIBLE FOR BEGINNERS.
The game does not do much explaining on rules and is way too difficult for beginners.
If you are confident in your skill then I reccomend getting the normal pretty girl mahjong game as that one is slightly easier then work up to this one.
I do mahjong irl and this game is an amazing way to practice and I have seen a lot of improvement in my playing.
TL;Dr It's a great basic riichi mahjong game but I do not reccomend it for people that are looking to learn as it offers no explaination or skill build up.
So... This is the Schoolgirl edition of their Mahjong Battle Game. However, I can only recommend it to those who know what the heck they are doing. Unlike some of their other games, the instructions are... not clear. So while I was getting trios and other matches to other players' tiles... I still was losing badly... all the time.
So... cannot recommend this for the casual player...
I will probably run up my playtime on both, though... May as well get the darn trading cards...
Dear Indie Developers,
Please create and release an English-language multiplayer mahjong game that I can play with my family. I'm disappointed this is currently my only option on Steam.
That being said, this seems to be an alright mahjong game, and the anime ladies are more of a window dressing than all up in your face.
I absolutely wouldn't pay full price for this game, but at the $1.50 I did buy it for, I can reccommend it.
The same deal as the previous one. Only really good if you already know how to play. If you do it’s good, if not… go learn before.
I for one will keep buying these mahjong games to support the existence of non-solitaire mahjong. We need more of these games.
Maybe one day we’ll even get one in English with lobby and only game… I would like that, except if it was with the US rules, those are really dumb.
Over all a pretty good Riichi Mahjong with an AI that’s no slacker, get good or go home.
Well.. not much difference compare to Mahjong Pretty Girls Battle.
This one is using school girls and lady teachers as opponents so the voice is cuter...
same type of graphics.. same sound effect... same player AI.. and even the same character unlocking steps.
Again.. this game don't have steam achievement but it got ingame achievements and you need to win 100 games or so to unlock all characters. After playing and spending an entire afternoon I was able to unlock half of them..
Game rule is japanese mahjong. So you will do well if you learn about it first before trying to play this.
6.5/10.. no plot.. and not enough research material .. just plain mahjong fun.
This game is so cheap made, that its just boring. When you figure out how it works, there is no more fun playing it.
I guess the major point of the game is the amount of girls and their looks. But, even though that, this game actually plays surprisingly well.
You will need to know what to do, you need to know how to play Mahjong, to play this, but it actually does a pretty good job of monitoring the outcomes. It also helps you a lot, indicating when you can win and also pausing the game when a tile is played, something that does not occur in a normal game. So, the game actually makes it pretty easy for you.
Yet, the ai seems pretty strong sometimes, they can make some pretty good plays, finishing the game quick. You actually have to be careful.
From this game and the "normal edition", I guess, there is no difference at all. So you shouldn't, probably, buy both. Well, I don't actually recommend you to buy any, since I think that this game lacks a lot of content for its price. But, if you must play a good game of mahjong (only with AI), you may consider this...
Yes, this is the same review, since the game is the same.
The very first thing that should be iterated about this game is that it is by NO MEANS a good way to learn how to play Riichi Mahjong at all. Don't buy this expecting it to include a tutorial on how to play; the only "help" it includes is a quick reference to what buttons do what when pressed. This game is basically your standard, low-budget, offline Mahjong software that's pretty common in Japan. As such, it's marketed towards a demographic which is already, at the very least, passingly familiar with the game and how it's played. The translation was likely done via google translate in an attempt to make more sales by cashing in on a Western audience who might've watched Akagi or Saki and thought "man, I have no idea what the fuck is going on but this looks really cool! I want in!" In that respect, it would seem that the developers were pretty successful in their endeavour, much to the buyers' dismay.
That being said, the game itself is solid as far as Mahjong software goes. It looks to be an almost straight-port of "Nagomi Mahjong" on Android, which as far as mobile Mahjong apps go, was one of the better ones. The gameplay itself is fine: it's responsive and all the yaku work (from what I've seen), which is pretty much all you can ask of a Mahjong game. It a fairly extensive set of customizable rules, and also includes gameplay statistics so you can track your performance over all your games. The only real gripes I have with the gameplay are:
1). Making any call plays this slow animation that becomes gruesome to sit through if you're impatient like me, and there's no way to turn it off.
2). The camera only views part of the table, and calls made by the Shimocha and the Toimen are only viewable if you click and drag the camera to their side of the table.
Also, the AI is pretty poor, but that's pretty common across most offline Mahjong games, so I'll give it a pass here.
These problems pretty much mean that the game plays much slower than some of the alternatives out there. If your main concern about the game is speed, you may want to look elsewhere for your offline Mahjong fix. It should also be noted that, as I pointed out a bit earlier, the translation is basically a wholesale travesty. This hasn't bothered me in the slightest because I use the Japanese language setting, however, if you're going to play this, you might as well just use the Japanese setting to avoid the headache. Learning the Kanji for all the Yaku is extremely useful in the long run if you plan on playing a LOT of Japanese Mahjong anyways, and since the translations used for the Yaku in this game are, for the most part, unused anywhere else, even in the few cliques of Japanese Mahjong players that use English terminology exclusively, there's no point in bothering to use the English language setting.
There is, however, a few unique aspects to the game's rules customization that I was pleasantly surprised with:
1). 3 options for game length. Tonpuusen (East only), Hanchan (East-South), and a non-standard option that I've never seen anywhere else titled "Tonba Nikyoku" (East Round, Two games). I'd never play a two-game match competitively (standard rules are enough luck as they are), but with bots, it's a pretty fun option.
2). Starting points can be set to any interval of 1000 between 10,000 and 50,000. Most games I've encountered have only between 25,000-30,000 as starting points options. Combine this with Tonba Nikyoku to have what amounts to a sudden deathmatch! Anything higher than Mangan means death!
3). It has the really obscure Yaku that I believe originate as local rules in the Kansai region that most other Mahjong softwares don't employ. These include:
*Sanrenkou
*Suurenkou
*Daisharin
*Daichiisei
*Shiisanpu-tou (No Shiisuupu-tou, however) [had to use dashes in the romanization here, as part of the name was censored]
*Benikujaku (Ryuuiisou except with the Chun and the red Sou tiles, fairly obscure by most standard rulesets)
As a collector of obscure Mahjong software, these few quirks alone made it a worthy addition to my collection. That being said, for the average joe just looking for a good offline Mahjong application (if you can call that person an average joe, even), Mahjong Pretty Girls Battle will most likely not suit your taste. There are certainly better options out there in terms of speed and presentation, and I can only recommend this game if you want either a). Obscure local rules or b). Mediocre art of school girls with large chest things. I will, however, still give this game a positive review, as personally, not only did the obscure rules please my autism, but I made the money I spent on it ($1) back with the cards I got from the game, and I can use it as a timetrack for whenever I play Mahjong on SEGANet or Tenhou, so I can now advertise to all my steam friends how much of my life I waste playing Chinese dominos!
If you want my recommendation for a pretty good offline Mahjong application, Saikyo no Maajan 3D is great, has excellent rules customization (more extensive than this game in terms of normal rules, but doesn't have the same non-standard yaku, points distribution or round lengths), and has a good English translation available. AFAIK, it doesn't include a tutorial, so if you need a game to actually LEARN Japanese Mahjong, I'd recommend Gamedesign's flash game above all else, as it includes a fairly good tutorial and has all the Yaku listed on the same page as the game for ease of reference. This alone may not be enough grasp all the concepts of the game, and for someone really willing to take the deep-dive into the world of Japanese Mahjong, I recommend watching HanaYoriUta's 4-part Riichi Mahjong tutorial on YouTube. It is inarguably the definitive English tutorial on how to play Japanse Mahjong for someone who lacks any real knowledge of the game.
This game only reminded me that I am not that good with mahjong, pretty girls, school or battling... I actually quite suck at all of them , separately and combined, cus I have no real clue what I am doing...I just wished there would have been a way to learn and understand what I am doing...
This is not, by any means, a beginner friendly game. If you wish to learn how to play mahjong, I recommend you find one of the many free flash games online. The AI is extremely aggressive and the learning curve is more like a learning overhang. I'm not the best Mahjong player by any means, but I know that someone of my skill level shouldn't be coming in 4th place with less than 10k points consistantly.
I can't say anything good or bad about the gameplay, because I have no clue how to play Mahjong. I can however say plenty of bad things about this game's total lack of a Mahjong tutorial. No matter how simple or complex a game is, it NEEDS to include instructions, because not everyone has played the game previously. Some games you can figure out how to play as you watch other people playing or by messing around with the game or checking out online tutorials, but Mahjong isn't one of those kinds of games. So, if you don't know how to play Mahjong, this isn't a game for you, even if you like anime-styled girls.
I can read japanese, so I don't actually use the english interface, but people seems to complain about the poorly translated rule book or something... well, I can't denied that, but for player who isn't even interested in Riichi mahjong shouldn't even buy this game... Want to learn about the rule, watch youtube video will understand better than just reading off a few words. and yes, the game will be better if it's translate correctly, I can't deny that.
Compare to previous game, the art and AI is indeed improve a lots too. There are no more 4 wins in a row by same person (in my experience). It's good, It's fine.
Overall, if you interested in Riichi Mahjong, learn the rules by googling, watch Saki or Akagi, look for youtube tutorial, learn by yourself. Buy this game AFTER you familiar with the rulez. It's a fun game to pick up IF YOU INTERESTED IN RIICHI MAHJONG.
This is one of those games that unless you're pretty knowledgeable about it, it would be a living hell.
A game relying on RNG (random number generator) can be one of the most annoying games. I play a garbage tile out, and I would then draw the same tile. It happens quite often too. I swear, this game is rigged. The bot that wins the first round almost always wins the other rounds. Some rounds can literally end in 10 seconds too. Just how one of the bot somehow becomes the "master" or the most lucky b@stard out there is pretty much the only (major) drawback for me.
For the unlockables, which is the other characters, being based on wins isn't so bad at all. Though I've only managed to win 1 round at the moment, my win rate is rising along with the minutes I put in this game.
Not exactly the game that is worth one's full attention, but rather occasionally clicking a few times when there is a spare moment available in another game. This is, at least how I would play the game.
Not being beginner friendly would be an understatement, I mean, who would actually look at the rulebook at its entirety?
Other than that, I think this game could potentially grow on any potential players.
Pros:
- fully functional Riichi Mahjong on Steam
- "custom rules" like number of rounds, starting points, open tanyao, red fives, etc.
Cons:
- "pretty" and "cute" are subjective. Just a handful of the girls don't look like shit
- no tutorial for beginners, not even basic stuff like a scoring table or yaku-list. If you can't play riichi you won't learn it with this game
- horrible gamespeed. You have the choice between painfully slow and way to fast. Choose slow and one game lasts several minutes. Choose fast and the AI discards 3 tiles in a split second. Best thing about that: If the AI calls on a discard for a win you don't know who it came from and what it was until a cut scene ends.
- talking about cutscenes: Every call on a tile causes an unskippable animation that can't be turned off and starts to get annoying after the fourth or fifth time, messing up the flow of the game even more
- UI is bad, you can't see the whole table
- game isn't completely translated
If you want anime titties, go and watch hentai. If want to play riichi mahjong vs a computer click here. You'll get better stuff than this game has to offer and the best thing about it: You don't have to pay money for it.
It's pretty good Japanese mah jong, it shows you all possiblities to play so you don't need to keep track of what was discarded, so it's easy to play, if not exactly easy to learn. There's no real tutorial, or, I can't tell if there's a tutorial because the english translation is pretty janky. It is fun to play once you get it down, and there's lots of girls to unlock, there's no 'plot' to speak of but there are lots to unlock.
The translation is garbage, the UI is full of annoying redundancies, the art is mediocre and the voice acting is lacklustre at best.
Even accounting for the need to know how to play riichi mahjong before jumping into the game (which I have no problem with), the game isn't worth any amount of money, let alone the $15 US asking price.
2/10. Avoid.
If you're look for a good Riichi game, this is NOT the game. Actually I don't really care about the girls, but gameplays.
Pros:
1. Graphics are fine.
2. There're lot of detailed rules in options.
3. It made me write this review even though my English is very bad.
Cons:
1. Everytime you want to Riichi or Kan, you have to click Action then click the corresponding action. This is redundant.
2. You cannot see the whole table unless dragging around with the mouse.
3. The animation of calling is too slow, compared to the game speed.
4. Things take forever to unlock, especially for a single player game.
5. (This one is my personal problem) Too many over-sized that things...
The game pace gives me strange feelings. AIs play tiles very fast, but it takes so much time to Call. Though I knew that you can adjust the speed of playing tiles, but AIs just take 0.x second to think, so that's just a waste of time to set it slow. If you wanted to learn Riichi, there're many better ways than this.
This is a lot like Saki: Achiga-hen...
...lots of complicated scoring, sudden wins, and characters I don't recognize.
The video is pretty honest. What you see is what you get: authentic reach mahjong, slightly translated, rulebook not included. The game does a good job of letting you know what your options are at any given time. Even if you're only acquainted with the rules, you can just click on tiles until one of the characters (hopefully yours) starts making happy noises. The process is cathartic in a solitaire type of way, but do this enough and maybe you'll even start to figure out what's going on. You do need to win a few times to unlock any new characters beyond the starting four, so it'll be a while before you meet everyone in the game.
The sound design is worth praising. The music is actually pretty good, the tiles make various satisfying clacks, and the voice acting isn't too annoyingly prominent.
There's no story whatsoever, so if you're looking for a visual novel, keep looking. The "translation" is an insult to the word, to be honest. The English that is there doesn't appear to have come from someone fluent, if it came from a person at all. None of the girls' quips are translated, but I can assure you that you aren't missing much.
The graphics are... well, redundant to comment on. The static nature of the game makes those screenshots above pretty representative of the actual game. It does have the option to run at 1080p, that's not always a given with these Japanese doujinsoft. The game is very responsive, there isn't any downtime while playing it on the default (quick) setting. There are a few spots where the game expects you to click and drag (to scroll or look around), which gives the impression it's friendly to touch screens.
So this game has a lot left to be desired, but it's worth your attention if you are interested in 2D girls, Japanese, and (inclusive and) reach mahjong. I give it eight bucks out of fifteen.
Игры похожие на Mahjong Pretty Girls Battle : School Girls Edition
Дополнительная информация
Разработчик | Zoo Corporation |
Платформы | Windows |
Ограничение возраста | Нет |
Дата релиза | 21.01.2025 |
Отзывы пользователей | 70% положительных (83) |