Microsoft Mahjong

Details

Playtime Not Played
Last Activity 23/08/2021 6:03:23
Added 28/03/2026 13:34:50
Modified 28/03/2026 13:44:03
Completion Status Not Played
Library Xbox
Source Xbox
Platform PC (Windows)
Release Date 27/07/2012
Community Score 66
Critic Score
User Score
Genre Tile matching
Developer Arkadium
Smoking Gun Interactive
Publisher Xbox Game Studios
Feature Cloud saves
Single-player
Touchscreen optimised
Links PCGamingWiki
Official site
HowLongToBeat
IGDB
MobyGames
Wikipedia
Tag Ad-supported
Bird's-eye view
Flip screen
Free to Play
Point and select
Relaxed
Subscription

Description

Microsoft Mahjong (formerly Mahjong Titans, Shanghai Solitaire and Taipei) is a computer game version of mahjong solitaire published by Microsoft. The version titled Mahjong Titans was developed by Oberon Games and included in Windows Vista and Windows 7 (except Starter and Home Basic editions). It takes advantage of the new graphical user interface (GUI) of Windows Vista, and includes features such as tile set and background choices. (In Windows Vista builds 5219 up to 5259, the game was known as Shanghai Solitaire.) The game did not make it to Windows 8; however, a standalone version, developed by Arkadium and published by Microsoft Studios, can be downloaded from the Windows Store free of charge and played without download on the web.

An older version of the game was known as Taipei and was bundled in Microsoft Entertainment Pack 1 and Best of Microsoft Entertainment Pack. That version included 32,767 possible configurations.

A mobile version of the game was released on iOS and Android, known as Mahjong by Microsoft.

Features

The player has a choice of six tile layouts: Turtle, Dragon, Cat, Fortress, Crab, and Spider. Each is a stylized portrayal of the respective object or animal. The background image can be chosen from five different options and there are four tile sets, including traditional Mahjong tiles, variations with fuller coloring or larger print, and an alternative pastel tile set with an entirely different picture theme.

Games are not entirely random. There is always at least one pair within five tiles of the topmost five tiles in the turtle layout and often two pairs. The algorithm for tile organization positions tiles such that they can mostly be paired on the same level, or otherwise a matching tile is available in an accessible position one level down. It does not check to ensure that the matching tile is not positioned beneath its partner. Since every tile has 3 partners this is not enough, by itself, to prove the game is impossible to solve.

The newer version of Microsoft Mahjong adds new layouts, improved graphics and sound, online features such as a set of daily challenges that reward the user with "badges" when completed, and Xbox Live integration.