![]() ![]() A tile is said to be open or exposed if it can be moved either left or right without disturbing other tiles. The 144 tiles are arranged in a special four-layer pattern with their faces upwards. The tiles come from the four-player game popular in East Asia known as Mahjong (to which the game is sometimes erroneously referred). Shanghai is a solitaire matching game that uses a set of tiles rather than cards. The arcade game the SunSoft developed was not marketed outside of Japan. The Famicom version, developed by SunSoft, was also exclusively sold in Japan. Published by Hudson Soft as a launch title, Shanghai was released for the PC Engine exclusively in Japan. The Atari 8-bit conversion of the game was released exclusively in Germany, one of the last regions where the platform was still commercially successful. The initial home computer versions were published in the United States and Europe. It should be noted, however, that not all versions were released in all markets. Though developed by a number of different companies, Japanese ports were primarily handled by Sunsoft, including a version developed for the arcade in 1988. As its popularity grew it was ported to several different home consoles and hand held gaming systems. ![]() The first commercial version of Shanghai was developed by Brodie Lockhart and published by Activision in 1986 for several popular American and European home computers. For example, in many versions, the tiles reveal the three-dimensional blinking eye of a dragon behind the game screen. After winning a game, different versions present the player with a reward. The challenge comes from devising a strategy to free up tiles so they can be removed from the stack. In Shanghai, the player removes both free tiles of a matching pair until all 144 tiles are gone. Choose images from your photo album or from a selection of custom designed artworkįrom fast two minute games to extended head scratchers, quickly choose from over 200 layouts or select one at random each time you start a game.Shanghai (上海) is a computerized version of Mahjong solitaire, a tile matching game. You can further personalize the look of the game with an unlimited selection of backgrounds. From Fractals to Trippy Polish Cinema we automatically make new sets available as they're cranked off the production line. ![]() Now you can choose from an ever expanding library of tilesets to keep the game fresh. Those that think that classic Mahjong is so 1924 can rest easy.
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