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Mahjong Cop Ryuu: Shiro Ookami no Yabou (MD, 1989)

One more tile left until retirement.

Tiles and blood everywhere. Just another day for… Mahjong Cop Ryuu.

PLAYERS: 1

PUBLISHER: Sega

DEVELOPER: Whiteboard

GENRE: Table/Adventure

RELEASE DATE: 12/14/89 – (JP)

A moonless night in Kyoto. An underground rïchi mahjong parlor, filled with angry chatter, saké, and nicotine-stained tiles. The White Wolf is playing against The Black Eagle. Two mahjong masters who also happen to be yakuza clan leaders. The White Wolf howls for the Yamaguchi-gumi, while The Black Eagle soars for the Sumiyoshi-kai. The stakes are high. The night’s game isn’t just for a 500,000 yen pot. It’s also to see which clan takes control over the wavering Kyokuto-kai.

Guile makes a cameo appearance.

The Black Eagle looks poised for victory. He has already declared rïchi and seems confident in the White Wolf’s downfall. The White Wolf is smiling. He knows something the Eagle doesn’t. As he leans forward to place a tile, the door to the parlor is thrust backwards. Mahjong Cop Ryuu and his tile squad rush in, throw over the tables, and arrest The Black Eagle and his younglings. The White Wolf escapes mysteriously into the night. Mahjong Cop Ryuu squints hesitantly into the darkness. He vows not to rest until every crooked mahjong parlor has been shut down and White Wolf taken back into captivity.

The not-at-all exciting title screen!

Or something. I have no idea what Mahjong Cop Ryuu‘s story entails, but my take is probably a little less crazy than what’s actually in the game. Just look at the cast on the game’s box: Robocop, Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Holocaust survivor and an innocent girl who looks over her head. You presumably take all of these folks on in mahjong games as Mahjong Cop Ryuu, but whether they’re true bad guys, innocent bystanders, or just jerks interfering with your mahjong brand of justice is beyond me.

This guy looks unbelievably greasy and evil.

Mahjong Cop Ryuu appears to be a marriage between the adventure genre and straightforward mahjong. You start off the game in an office, talking with a dude who is either your partner or a suspect who won’t answer your questions. Either way, you have three options. Two of the options lead to extended banter, while the other ushers you into a mahjong match. I sort of learned how to play mahjong about two years ago for my SG-1000 Mahjong review, but I failed to keep up my tile skills, thus forgetting any information I previously learned. I’m also fairly confident that Mahjong Cop Ryuu features Japanese mahjong, which I never learned at all and which has its own rules and different ways of scoring. Combine that with the abundant Japanese text throughout the game, and this is one adventure/table game I can’t understand.

Mahjong Cop Ryuu tackles his next case.

Which is a shame. Mahjong Cop Ryuu might not be the action-packed 16-bit experience Mega Drive fans were after, but if you’re going to throw a mahjong game on your console, combining traditional mahjong matches with an outlandish story is the best way to go. Even worse: no enterprising soul has yet to create a fan translation of this game. This means if you want to bring all these mahjong hooligans to justice, you better start learning Japanese or be hella good at Japanese mahjong. Ryuu’s badge depends on it.

14 replies on “Mahjong Cop Ryuu: Shiro Ookami no Yabou (MD, 1989)”

I was kind of hoping for once someone would penetrate this game and lay it’s secrets bare. Pretty much every preview of this game I’ve read in the last 5 years mostly ends with they had no idea what they were doing. Oh well. At least another future game I was always curious about got a fan translation recently. Rent A Hero, So I can look forward to that. Honestly, I don’t think there was a ton of exclusive To Japan Genesis games. There were some games that were different. But I think we got most of the games, I do know there were quite a few Sega CD Japan exclusives though.

I’m coming back to this game once my Japanese reading skills pick up a bit. Probably re-review it too. It’s too interesting of a premise to let lie.

Alternatively, if anyone speaks/reads Japanese and English, feel free to e-mail me.

I would argue this is the least likely fan translation. Because even if translated, involves gameplay that nearly no westerner would know how to play , among a sea of other untranslated Mahjong games.

Actually, Battle Golfer Yui will soon get a fan-translation as far as I know, likely before you get to reviewing it. Though I also have to agree that mahjong games etc. are usually the least likely candidates for translation. Most groups tend to work on RPGs, platformers, strategy games and text adventure games. The other genres aren’t as common. Even VNs aren’t as common as you’d think, which is why very few Saturn/Dreamcast games have been translated thus far (and these systems are a pain to work on regardless as it is)…

You need not bother this. I’m Japanese and I can say this is not up to your expectation. Avoid.

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