Mahjong: The 10-Minute Crash Course
Mahjong has been around for over 150 years and is played daily by millions of Chinese people — in parks, in homes, in dedicated mahjong parlors, and in basically any restaurant that has a spare table. Here's what you need to know.
What Is Mahjong, Really?
Think of it as a card game, but with tiles. Like rummy, you're trying to collect matching sets. You pick up tiles, discard tiles, and try to complete a winning hand before anyone else does.
The tiles are beautiful — carved with Chinese characters and symbols. There are three "suits" (numbered 1-9), plus special tiles like winds and dragons. A standard set has 144 tiles.
The Basic Rules (Simplified)
- Each player starts with 13 tiles
- On your turn: draw a tile, then discard one (keeping 13)
- Goal: form 4 sets + 1 pair (14 tiles total)
- A set is either: 3 identical tiles OR 3 tiles in sequence (like 4-5-6)
- First person to complete wins and shouts "Hu!" (胡!)
That's it. That's the core game. There are about 30 regional variations across China, but the basics above work everywhere.
Where to Play as a Tourist
- Parks and sidewalks: In smaller cities, you'll see people playing mahjong on folding tables outside their shops, especially in Sichuan province. Walk up, watch for a bit, and if someone gestures for you to sit down, go for it
- Mahjong parlors (棋牌室): Found in every Chinese city. Some are upscale with private rooms, others are bare-bones. Price: 20-50 CNY per hour for a table
- Hotels and hostels: Many hostels have mahjong sets you can borrow. Some hotels in Chengdu and Chongqing even have mahjong tables in the room
- Friends' homes: If a Chinese friend invites you to play mahjong, always say yes. It's one of the biggest social compliments you can receive
Money on the Table
Let's be honest: mahjong often involves small-stakes gambling. A typical casual game plays for 1-5 CNY per point. You might win or lose 50-200 CNY in an evening. This is completely normal and social — it's not high-stakes poker.
Warning: Some mahjong parlors are fronts for serious gambling. If the stakes seem high or the atmosphere feels sketchy, leave. Stick to playing with people you know or at your hotel.
Mahjong Etiquette
- Mix tiles face-down before each round — everyone helps shuffle
- Don't look at other players' tiles — obvious, but worth stating
- Announce your actions clearly — "chi" (吃, take a sequence), "peng" (碰, take a matching pair), "gang" (杠, take four of a kind)
- Keep the game moving — don't take forever to decide your discard
- Losing gracefully is more important than winning — complain about your bad tiles, congratulate the winner
KTV: Everything You Need to Know
Chinese karaoke is nothing like Western karaoke. Forget the bar stage with drunk strangers watching you. KTV means private rooms, your own sound system, food delivery to your room, and singing with just your friends. China has over 100,000 KTV venues.
How KTV Works
- Arrive and pick a room size — small (4-6 people), medium (8-12), large (15-20+)
- Get the remote/tablet — it controls the song queue, volume, and lighting
- Search for songs — by language, artist, or song name. English songs are always available
- Order food and drinks — beer, fruit platters, snacks. Some KTVs have full kitchen menus
- Sing — or don't. Sitting and eating while friends sing is also perfectly acceptable
- Pay when you leave — usually per hour or per session (2-3 hours)
What Does KTV Cost?
| Tier | Price (per person, 3 hours) | What You Get |
|---|---|---|
| Budget | 30-60 CNY | Basic room, older equipment |
| Mid-range | 80-150 CNY | Good sound system, food/drink packages |
| Premium (Party World, K-Box) | 150-300 CNY | High-end rooms, large screens, premium audio |
| Luxury | 500+ CNY | Private suites, DJ equipment, bottle service |
Pro tip: Afternoon sessions (2-6 PM) are usually half the price of evening slots. Perfect for a rainy day activity.
Songs That Work Every Time
If you're a foreigner at KTV and don't know what to sing, these are fail-safe choices:
English songs Chinese people know and love:
- "My Heart Will Go On" (Celine Dion) — the undisputed KTV classic
- "Yesterday Once More" (Carpenters) — almost everyone knows this one
- "Hotel California" (Eagles) — crowd favorite
- "Let It Go" (Frozen) — works especially well with mixed groups
- Any Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran, or Adele hit
If you want to impress: Learn one Chinese song. "月亮代表我的心" (The Moon Represents My Heart by Teresa Teng) is slow, simple, and will absolutely blow your Chinese friends' minds if you can sing even the chorus. The pinyin lyrics are easy to find online.
KTV Culture Tips
- If invited, don't refuse. KTV invitations are social gold in China — especially from colleagues or business contacts
- It's not about singing well. It's about participating. Even holding the mic and mumbling along counts
- The real bonding happens between songs — eating, drinking, chatting. KTV is a social event, not a performance
- Business KTV is a thing. Deals get discussed, relationships get built, and hierarchies get loosened at KTV. If your Chinese business partner suggests KTV after dinner, that's a good sign
- Book ahead on weekends. Use Dianping (大众点评) app to find and reserve KTV rooms near you
Why These Two Activities Matter
Mahjong and KTV aren't just entertainment — they're the social glue of Chinese life. Understanding them helps you understand China.
Mahjong = Chinese Social Network (the Original One)
Before WeChat, before QQ, before the internet — there was mahjong. Neighbors played together, business partners played together, families played together on holidays. In Sichuan province, tea houses are basically mahjong parlors with tea service. The game creates a space where conversation flows naturally, relationships deepen, and social hierarchies flatten.
Today, retired Chinese people play mahjong almost daily — it's social activity, mental exercise, and entertainment rolled into one. If you see elderly people in a park intensely focused on tiles, that's their social media feed.
KTV = Where Relationships Get Real
Chinese social culture can feel formal — lots of polite conversation, careful hierarchy, indirect communication. KTV strips that away. After a few songs and a few beers, people relax. The boss sings badly and everyone cheers anyway. The quiet colleague turns out to have an amazing voice. The foreigner attempts a Chinese song and earns instant respect regardless of quality.
For more on Chinese nightlife and entertainment, check out our guide to the best shows and performances in China. And if you're traveling solo and looking for ways to meet people, see our solo travel guide.
