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"GRANNYCORE" GAME. People play mahjong at an event organized by the
YLL Mahjong Club in San Francisco. Eventbrite, a popular ticketing app,
reports there was a 179% increase in U.S. mahjong events on its platform
from 2023 to 2024. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)
From The Asian Reporter, V35, #8 (October 6, 2025), pages 9 &
10.

Mahjong nights draw young crowds to San Francisco bars
and restaurants
By Terry Chea
The Associated Press
San Francisco — When Ryan Lee first played mahjong two years ago, he
got hooked. He dug out sets of the classic Chinese tile game from his
parents’ house and brought them to San Francisco, where he started
hosting mahjong nights in his apartment.
The gatherings became so popular that the 25-year-old Chinese
American began hosting pop-up mahjong parties in restaurants, bars, and
nightclubs around San Francisco.
Mahjong, invented in 19th-century China, is gaining popularity with a
new generation of players looking to get off their phones and socialize
in the real world.
Lee’s Youth Luck Leisure (YLL) Mahjong Club now hosts bimonthly
parties with up to 30 tables and 200 guests. They attract a diverse,
young crowd drawn to the festive atmosphere, live DJs, custom cocktails,
and a chance to meet new friends. Instructors are on hand to teach
novices.
"A lot of people are just really intrigued even though they don’t
really know how to play," Lee said. "There’s a cultural component
they’re trying to connect with. It’s kind of like a cultural nostalgia."
Eventbrite, a popular ticketing app, reports there was a 179%
increase in U.S. mahjong events on its platform from 2023 to 2024.
The event platform says Gen Z is also showing a growing interest in
other "grannycore" activities such as baking workshops and needlework
circles that happen offline.
In mahjong, four players draw and discard tiles with different suits,
numbers, and Chinese characters. The object is to build a winning hand
of four sets of three and one pair.
"It’s a really tactile game, and it’s really a social game. It really
easily builds community among people," said Nicole Wong, a writer and
audio producer in Oakland. "It’s a good way to unplug and not just be on
your phone."
Wong learned how to play when she visited her Chinese grandparents in
New Zealand in 2009. Several years ago she found her parents’ mahjong
table and game sets, and started hosting mahjong nights with her
friends.
In 2019, she launched The Mahjong Project, an instructional guide and
oral history project inspired by her family’s love of the game. That led
her to publish Mahjong: House Rules from Across the Asian Diaspora,
an illustrated book that explores the game’s history, strategies,
traditions, and styles of play.
"For the Asian American community, I think there’s interest in
connecting to your heritage and your culture in a way that was not the
case when I was growing up," Wong said.
YLL Mahjong Club has held nearly 20 events in San Francisco since it
started last year. Lee said it’s an opportunity to introduce people to
the game as well as bring business to local restaurants, bars, and food
vendors. Lee’s sister started hosting similar events in Los Angeles.
There are plans to expand to other U.S. cities.
"The demand is rising," said Lee, a management consultant in business
school. "It’s not just an interest to learn how to play mahjong, but to
find a third space or another community to do things with."
Joyce Yam, YLL Mahjong Club’s sponsorship manager, helps manage the
San Francisco events, which sell out fast and have long waiting lists.
"We welcome people who have no experience at mahjong at all, and we
have TA’s who teach the people how to play the game. And they love it so
much that they keep coming back," Yam said.
Ethan Vuong, a Florida native who lives in San Francisco, started
playing with friends a couple years ago. He saw it as a way to connect
with his Chinese heritage and make new friends. He’s a regular at
Oakland’s Baba House and YLL Mahjong Club events, where he volunteers to
teach newcomers.
"It’s not just a skill or mechanics-based game, it’s an expression of
your personality," Vuong said. "I just keep playing because I have this
goal that I’m going to beat my grandma one day."
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