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Remove Matching Tiles from the Board

Tai Pim Mah Jong is a tile-matching puzzle based on Mahjong solitaire. The board holds many decorated tiles arranged in a layered shape. Your goal is to remove every tile by selecting matching pairs. Two tiles must carry the same picture or symbol before they can form a pair.

The mouse handles all the controls. Click one available tile and then click its matching partner. A correct pair disappears from the board. This may uncover hidden pieces and create new choices.

Only Free Tiles Can Form a Pair

Not every visible tile can move. A tile needs an open side and must not have another piece resting on top of it. Tiles trapped between other pieces stay locked until you clear the items around them.

This rule makes Tai Pim Mah Jong more than a simple picture-matching activity. A matching pair may appear on the screen, yet one tile may still remain blocked. Players need to search across the whole layout instead of clicking the first identical symbols they notice.

Think Before Removing an Easy Pair

Some moves open several new tiles. Other moves remove a pair but leave the board almost unchanged. Clearing pieces from the upper layers often creates more useful choices. Removing tiles from long outer rows can also release pieces trapped near the centre.

It helps to notice repeated symbols. Several identical tiles may appear at once. Choosing the wrong pair can leave the remaining two blocked in difficult positions. Tai Pim Mah Jong rewards players who compare their options before making a selection.

Clear the Layout Without Getting Stuck

A round continues until you remove every tile or reach a point with no available pairs. The board becomes easier to read as the layers disappear. The final few matches can still cause trouble because one poor choice early in the round may affect the ending.

Tai Pim Mah Jong has a calm style and simple controls. It does not require quick reactions or complicated button combinations. Players can study the symbols at their own pace and plan which sections to open first.

The game works well for short puzzle sessions. It also supports repeated play because players can try a better order after an unsuccessful round. Tai Pim Mah Jong turns a board of decorated pieces into a thoughtful challenge where every pair can change the next move.