

Mahjong Solitaire
Mahjong Solitaire
Mahjong Solitaire - Free Mahjong Solitaire: Classic Boards, Connect Mode, and Co-op
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Mahjong Solitaire Online: 21 Boards, Every Deal Winnable
Foony Mahjong Solitaire is a free online tile-matching game with 21 hand-built boards, a flat-grid Connect mode, and something no other mahjong site on the front page of Google has: real multiplayer, where everyone plays the same live board. Every deal is generated by simulating a winning game in reverse, so a path to a full clear always exists, and when you paint yourself into a corner anyway, one tap shuffles the remaining tiles into a fresh arrangement that is again solvable. No download, no signup, no dead boards.
The game opens straight into the five-layer Turtle if you want tradition, or rotates through dragons, pagodas, koi ponds, and Mount Fuji if you leave the board on Random. Tiles sit in chunky 2.5D stacks, blocked tiles dim so you always know what is playable, and matched pairs pop off the board with a satisfying flick.
Multiplayer Mahjong: Race or Co-op on One Shared Board
Mahjong solitaire has been a lonely game for forty years. Here it does not have to be. Create a room, share the invite link, and every player sees the identical layout update live as pairs vanish.
Race
The default mode. Every pair you click scores for you: 10 points a pair, plus a 5-point streak bonus when you chain a match within 4 seconds of your last one. Most points when the board clears wins.
Co-op
One checkbox in the lobby and the same board becomes a team puzzle: clear it together, no competition, everyone wins. The pace that made mahjong a fixture of family computers, now shared.
Rooms hold anywhere from 1 to 1,000 players and support hot-joining, so a friend can drop into a game already in progress. Solo play needs no room setup at all; the board deals the moment you start.
Room Settings: Classic Rules or Connect, 21 Boards, an Optional Clock
The host picks the mode. Classic is the free-tile rule on stacked layouts. Mahjong Connect flattens the board into a grid where two identical tiles match if a line of at most three straight segments can join them through open space, including around the outside edge. Connect plays faster and rewards spatial reading over stack planning, and it gets its own boards, including the solid 14x8 Full Grid that opens from the edges inward.
The board picker offers Random plus 21 named layouts: Turtle, Dragon, Petey, Torii Gate, Pagoda, Koi Pond, Great Wave, Paper Fan, Lantern Festival, Bonsai, Panda, Crane, Yin Yang, Mount Fuji, Cherry Blossom, Fortress, Cloud Nine, Crown, Butterfly, Heart, and Full Grid. They range from the full 144-tile Turtle down to quick 46-tile shapes, so a game can be a coffee break or a campaign. An optional time limit (3 to 30 minutes) turns any board into a deadline; when the clock runs out in a race, the highest score takes it.
How to Play Mahjong Solitaire
Click a tile, then click its twin to remove the pair. A tile can be picked up only when it is free: nothing rests on top of it, and its left or right side is open. Dots, bamboo, and character tiles match only their exact face; the four flowers all match each other, and so do the four seasons. Clear all tiles to win.
Two helpers keep games moving. The hint button asks the server for one legal pair and highlights it (with a 10-second cooldown, so it is a nudge rather than an autopilot). And when no legal moves remain, a banner appears with a shuffle button that re-deals the remaining tiles into a new solvable arrangement. Shuffling is free and unlimited, but clearing a board without ever needing it earns the Pure Sight achievement.
Mahjong Strategy: Clear Smarter, Not Faster
- Work the long rows and tall stacks first. Tiles in the middle of a long row and tiles buried under layers are the ones that strand you. The Turtle's five-deep center is the whole game; the rim is a distraction.
- When you see three of a kind, pick the pair that unlocks more. Two of the three are always the right match, and it is the pair whose removal frees new tiles. Matching the convenient two on the rim while the third stays buried is the classic losing move.
- Open both ends of a row before you need them. A row blocked on both sides is invisible until late game. Freeing one end early doubles your options later.
- In a race, bank your streaks. The 5-point streak bonus rewards chaining matches within 4 seconds, so spot your next pair while the current one is still flying off the board.
- In Connect, clear from the rim inward. Edge tiles can route around the outside of the board, so they are almost always matchable. Interior tiles open up as the grid empties.
Leaderboards, Achievements, and Tile Cosmetics
Scores feed Mahjong Solitaire leaderboards filterable by day, week, month, year, or all-time. There are 8 Mahjong Solitaire achievements, from First of Many for finishing a game to Pure Sight (no shuffles), Lightning Tiles (clear in under five minutes), Hot Streak (five streak bonuses in one game), Match Point (win a race), and Better Together (a co-op clear). The Mahjong Solitaire tile sets cover three cosmetic slots: tile backs like Jade, Rosewood, and Obsidian, face sets including an easy-reading Large Print, and table backgrounds from Bamboo Grove to Koi Pond. Playing also earns Foony coins and account XP that carry across every game on the site.
One of the 21 boards is Petey himself. Clearing the mascot tile by tile is exactly as fun as it sounds.
Mahjong Solitaire vs Mahjong vs Mahjong Connect
The naming confuses everyone eventually. Traditional mahjong is a four-player draw-and-discard game in the rummy family. Mahjong solitaire borrows its gorgeous 144-tile set and nothing else: it began as the 1981 computer game Shanghai, and the layout-clearing puzzle spread from there to every operating system and airport seatback on earth. Mahjong Connect is the younger flat-grid cousin built on pathfinding instead of stacking. Foony ships the solitaire puzzle and the Connect variant in one room; the four-player game is a different beast entirely.
If you learned the genre on Mahjong Titans, the mahjong solitaire game that shipped with Windows Vista and 7, everything here will feel immediately familiar: the same free-tile rule, a five-layer turtle-style board, and no Windows required.
Want another calm-but-sharp puzzle after the tiles run out? Foony Sudoku brings the same multiplayer twist to number puzzles, with co-op boards and 1v1 races.