Leon's Mahjong game icon showing retro pixel art style

Leon's Mahjong 🀄️

A 16-bit love letter to classic Mahjong solitaire.

Handcrafted pixel art. 81 boards, every one of them solvable. No ads, no timers, no in-app purchases.

Coming soon to Windows and Linux.

Why Leon's Mahjong? 💡

81 handcrafted boards

Unique layouts across seasons and sceneries, and every future board update is free.

Always solvable

A custom algorithm guarantees every deal can be finished. Prefer danger? There's a fully random mode too.

No catches

No ads, no in-app purchases, no tracking, no internet required, no data collected. One purchase and the whole game is yours.

Take your time

There is no time limit. Mahjong is meant to be relaxing.

Pixel-perfect 16-bit art

Every tile, background, and season lovingly drawn as a tribute to the 16-bit era.

Four tile sets

Switch between four hand-drawn tile sets to find the look you like best.

Relaxing music

Relaxing music by Swedish composer Bjørn Lynne.

Play everywhere

Available on iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Android.

Speaks your language

Fully localized into 15 languages.

Reviews ⭐

Our App Store ratings from every country where the game is available.

See all reviews →

Story of the Game 📖

When I was a kid, I was lucky. My dad always had a great computer at home. In 1987, that meant an Amiga 1000. We played many games together, and one of our favorites was a Mahjong solitaire game. Those were happy times. Sadly, my father passed away in 1999.

Fast forward to today: my teenage son Leon brought home an old Compaq laptop from Cologne. It had one game: Mahjong. Despite having access to modern consoles, he was fascinated. He hadn't played Mahjong before, and like me as a kid, he got hooked.

Watching him struggle with a ball mouse and ancient trackpad, I told him, "This Mahjong isn't the real deal. The Amiga one was better: more charm, better art, better shadows!" He looked at me and said, "Why don't you make your own version then?"

So I did. I built it in Unity and called it "Leon's Mahjong." A tribute to my dad, a gift to my son, and a bridge that connects three generations, allowing Leon to share in something his grandfather loved, even though they never met.