All Pungs (對對糊)
All four sets are pungs (or kongs). No chows allowed.
How All Pungs (對對糊) works
A hand whose four melded sets are all pungs (or kongs) of triplets, with no chows at all, plus a pair.
Every set in the hand must be three (or four) identical tiles; sequences are forbidden. It is one of the most common 'shape' patterns and can be won either concealed or with exposed pungs. It frequently stacks with suit-based faan such as Half Flush or Full Flush, and is a structural prerequisite for honor-heavy hands like All Honors.
- •A kong counts as a pung for this purpose, so a hand mixing pungs and kongs still qualifies.
- •Seven Pairs is a different shape and does not count as All Pungs, even though both avoid chows.
- •If even one chow appears the pattern is lost entirely; there is no partial credit.
All Pungs (對對糊) — FAQ
Do kongs break the All Pungs pattern?
No. A kong is treated as a triplet for shape purposes, so pungs and kongs together still form All Pungs.
Can the hand be partly exposed?
Yes. The triplets may be exposed by claiming discards; concealment is not required, though a fully concealed version may earn additional concealed-hand credit separately.