Games like Double Yakuman II

Cosmic Consensus cover

Cosmic Consensus

An online board game published by Berkeley Systems in which a group of players race to the top of the ziggurat, their number of steps each turn determined by the popularity of their answer to an opinion-based poll question, and the traps and bonuses set on each step of the ziggurat.

Pro Mahjong Kiwame GB cover

Pro Mahjong Kiwame GB

Pro Mahjong Kiwame GB is a Japanese Game Boy Mahjong game.

Honkaku Pro Mahjong: Tetsuman Special cover

Honkaku Pro Mahjong: Tetsuman Special

A mahjong game from Chat Noir and Naxat Soft.

1500 DS Spirits Vol. 1: Mahjong cover

1500 DS Spirits Vol. 1: Mahjong

1500DS Spirits Vol. 1: Mahjong is a Japanese Mahjong game for the Nintendo DS. The game also feature a quiz mode called "Furikomi Quiz" with 110 Questions.

Super Real Mahjong PV Paradise: All-Star 4-nin Uchi cover

Super Real Mahjong PV Paradise: All-Star 4-nin Uchi

Part of SETA Corporation's series of mahjong games featuring a recurring cast of anime women. PV Paradise is a Super Famicom-exclusive entry.

Mahjong Station Mazin cover

Mahjong Station Mazin

A PlayStation mahjong game with a kooky cast of characters.

Mahjong Sengoku Jidai cover

Mahjong Sengoku Jidai

Mahjong Sengoku Jidai is a Board game, developed by Sanritsu and published by Sega, which was released in Japan in 1987.

Mahjong Club cover

Mahjong Club

Mahjong Club is a Miscellaneous game, developed by Natsu System and published by Hect, which was released in Japan in 1994.

Janyuuki Goku Randa cover

Janyuuki Goku Randa

Janyuuki Goku Randa is a Miscellaneous game, published by Virgin Interactive, which was released in Japan in 1995.

Mahjong Kazoku cover

Mahjong Kazoku

Mahjong Kazoku is a Mahjong game released only in Japan for the Famicom Disk System. Mahjong Kazoku ("Mahjong Family") is a standard Mahjong simulation game for Nintendo's Famicom Disk System. It is a one-on-one version of the game, rather than the standard four-player board game arrangement, and it incorporates many of the various and byzantine scoring rules of the game. Irem developed and published the game but left a mysterious licensing credit to Ox Inc. on the title screen. It's possible the game is a port of an obscure Japanese Mahjong computer game, or at least borrows some of its coding for the AI opponent or scoring systems.