Games like Honkaku Mahjong: Tetsuman

Mahjong Hanjouki cover

Mahjong Hanjouki

Mahjong Hanjouki is a Miscellaneous game, published by Nichibutsu, which was released in Japan in 1995.

Real Football 2019 cover

Real Football 2019

Real Football / Soccer is a series of mobile football/soccer games by Gameloft that has been released annually since 2004.

Honkaku Mahjong: Tetsuman II cover

Honkaku Mahjong: Tetsuman II

Honkaku Mahjong: Tetsuman II is a Miscellaneous game, developed by Khaos and published by Naxat Soft, which was released in Japan in 1994.

Mahjong Hishou-den: Shin Naki no Ryuu cover

Mahjong Hishou-den: Shin Naki no Ryuu

Mahjong Hishouden: Shin Naki no Ryuu is a Miscellaneous game, published by Bec, which was released in Japan in 1995.

Super Real Mahjong PIV cover

Super Real Mahjong PIV

Super Real Mahjong PIV is a Miscellaneous game, developed by Affect and published by Seta Corporation, which was released in Japan in 1994.

Sword Girls cover

Sword Girls

Sword Girls is a browser based card game featuring anime art style. While this is a card game, it's heavily dependent on a crafting system to keep its players occupied.

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.

DanMachi: Cross Istoria cover

DanMachi: Cross Istoria

DanMachi: Cross Istoria is a mobile game based on anime series Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon? The main point of the game is to collect cards of various characters from the series, such as Bell and Ais, and use them to fight against raid bosses and in other functions.

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.

Pokémon Play It! cover

Pokémon Play It!

A version of the Pokemon Trading Card game playable on PC.