Compare Legendary Mahjong prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by IP Izmailov Vladimir Yurievich. Published by HH-Games. Released on 10/25/2017. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie.

Quiet gods, crumbling temples, and a mountain of tile-matching levels - if you want a low-pressure mahjong fix with more mode variety than most genre entries bother with, this small HH-Games release quietly delivers.

I wasn't expecting much when I loaded up Legendary Mahjong. Solo puzzle games from small indie publishers tend to find one mechanic and squeeze it dry across fifty repetitive boards. What I found instead was a surprisingly structured campaign built around a mythology-flavored premise - forgotten gods, neglected temples, one benevolent deity trying to give humanity a fighting chance - that gives the level progression just enough narrative glue to feel purposeful rather than arbitrary. The core loop is tile-matching solitaire: a layered stack of tiles sits on the board, and you clear pairs by clicking identical open tiles, which gradually exposes the layers beneath. That much is standard mahjong solitaire. Where Legendary Mahjong earns its keep is in the six distinct game modes that open up as you move through the temples. Classic mode is the familiar pairing challenge. Match mode places target tiles at the bottom of the screen and asks you to find them in the stack above. Slide mode has you physically moving tiles across the board to reach their pairs. Numbers mode introduces simple arithmetic, asking you to match tiles whose values sum to a given target. Triple mode switches from pairs to three-of-a-kind sets. Rivers mode connects pairs through line-linking across the board. Each mode gets a short tutorial before it throws you in, which is more onboarding care than this genre usually bothers to provide. Unlocking new temples requires clearing four levels in the previous one, so the pace feels earned without being punishing. The presentation is modest but considered. Around 14 tile sets are available, backgrounds can be swapped out, and the board layouts are customizable to a degree that lets you shape the aesthetic to your mood. The music loops, and after an extended session the repetition becomes noticeable - this is genuinely the game's most honest weakness. A rotating soundtrack or even two or three tracks would have helped the atmosphere breathe. The graphics are functional rather than beautiful; calling them hand-drawn flatters them a little, but the tile art is clear and readable, which matters more in practice than visual polish. One community note worth flagging: some players reported a heat issue where the game runs unusually hot relative to its visual demands, which may be worth watching on older hardware. Difficulty is the other honest caveat. The campaign is gently tuned, and experienced mahjong players will find very little that resists them until deeper temple levels. It is designed to be accessible, and it succeeds at that - whether that reads as a flaw depends entirely on what you want from the genre. For players who treat mahjong solitaire as a meditative unwinding ritual rather than a challenge exercise, the approachable curve is the point. The sheer volume of content - over 500 adventure levels and more than 300 boards in classic mode alone - means the loop has room to settle into something genuinely calming over multiple sessions. Legendary Mahjong is not trying to reinvent the genre or make a statement. It is a carefully assembled, unpretentious collection of mahjong variations from a solo developer, and it knows exactly what it is. For the player who wants a quiet evening with tile-matching that offers more structural variety than a browser game but none of the noise of a bigger production, this one sits comfortably in that niche. Kai, Scout Team

Legendary Mahjong
CasualIndie

Legendary Mahjong

Oct 25, 2017IP Izmailov Vladimir YurievichHH-Games
GamerScout Says

Quiet gods, crumbling temples, and a mountain of tile-matching levels - if you want a low-pressure mahjong fix with more mode variety than most genre entries bother with, this small HH-Games release quietly delivers.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Legendary Mahjong

I wasn't expecting much when I loaded up Legendary Mahjong. Solo puzzle games from small indie publishers tend to find one mechanic and squeeze it dry across fifty repetitive boards. What I found instead was a surprisingly structured campaign built around a mythology-flavored premise - forgotten gods, neglected temples, one benevolent deity trying to give humanity a fighting chance - that gives the level progression just enough narrative glue to feel purposeful rather than arbitrary. The core loop is tile-matching solitaire: a layered stack of tiles sits on the board, and you clear pairs by clicking identical open tiles, which gradually exposes the layers beneath. That much is standard mahjong solitaire. Where Legendary Mahjong earns its keep is in the six distinct game modes that open up as you move through the temples. Classic mode is the familiar pairing challenge. Match mode places target tiles at the bottom of the screen and asks you to find them in the stack above. Slide mode has you physically moving tiles across the board to reach their pairs. Numbers mode introduces simple arithmetic, asking you to match tiles whose values sum to a given target. Triple mode switches from pairs to three-of-a-kind sets. Rivers mode connects pairs through line-linking across the board. Each mode gets a short tutorial before it throws you in, which is more onboarding care than this genre usually bothers to provide. Unlocking new temples requires clearing four levels in the previous one, so the pace feels earned without being punishing. The presentation is modest but considered. Around 14 tile sets are available, backgrounds can be swapped out, and the board layouts are customizable to a degree that lets you shape the aesthetic to your mood. The music loops, and after an extended session the repetition becomes noticeable - this is genuinely the game's most honest weakness. A rotating soundtrack or even two or three tracks would have helped the atmosphere breathe. The graphics are functional rather than beautiful; calling them hand-drawn flatters them a little, but the tile art is clear and readable, which matters more in practice than visual polish. One community note worth flagging: some players reported a heat issue where the game runs unusually hot relative to its visual demands, which may be worth watching on older hardware. Difficulty is the other honest caveat. The campaign is gently tuned, and experienced mahjong players will find very little that resists them until deeper temple levels. It is designed to be accessible, and it succeeds at that - whether that reads as a flaw depends entirely on what you want from the genre. For players who treat mahjong solitaire as a meditative unwinding ritual rather than a challenge exercise, the approachable curve is the point. The sheer volume of content - over 500 adventure levels and more than 300 boards in classic mode alone - means the loop has room to settle into something genuinely calming over multiple sessions. Legendary Mahjong is not trying to reinvent the genre or make a statement. It is a carefully assembled, unpretentious collection of mahjong variations from a solo developer, and it knows exactly what it is. For the player who wants a quiet evening with tile-matching that offers more structural variety than a browser game but none of the noise of a bigger production, this one sits comfortably in that niche. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Temple CampaignSix Game ModesTile CustomizationAccessible DifficultySlide ModeNumbers ModeTriple MatchLine-Link MatchingRelaxing PuzzleMythology Theme

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 / 8 / 10 / 11
Memory
2048 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
250 MB available space
Graphics
512MB
Processor
1.5 GHz
Sound Card
DirectX compatible sound device

Recommended

OS
Windows 7 / 8 / 10 / 11
Storage
250 MB available space
Graphics
512MB or higher
Processor
1.5 GHz or higher
Sound Card
DirectX compatible sound device

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Legendary Mahjong.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
IP Izmailov Vladimir Yurievich
Publisher
HH-Games
Release Date
Oct 25, 2017

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Frequently asked questions about Legendary Mahjong

Where can I buy Legendary Mahjong cheapest?

Compare Legendary Mahjong prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Legendary Mahjong available on?

Legendary Mahjong is available on PC.

When was Legendary Mahjong released?

Legendary Mahjong was released on 25 October 2017.

Who developed Legendary Mahjong?

Legendary Mahjong was developed by IP Izmailov Vladimir Yurievich and published by HH-Games.