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Why Is Everyone Suddenly Obsessed With Mahjong in 2026?

Game nights look different in 2026, and the tile clatter spilling out of cafes, living rooms and community centers has a name. The mahjong revival is quietly reshaping how Americans gather, and the numbers behind it are striking. Eventbrite reported a 179 percent jump in mahjong events nationwide between 2023 and 2024, signaling that a centuries-old tile game has moved from niche pastime to mainstream social ritual.

What is fueling the surge? A mix of post-pandemic loneliness, a generational pivot away from drinking, and a craving for tactile, screen-free connection that few activities deliver as well as four people shuffling tiles around a table.

How Mahjong Became a Mainstream Social Activity in America

Mahjong is not new to the United States. The game first swept the country in the 1920s, and it has cycled through waves of popularity ever since. What sets this moment apart is who is showing up to play and why.

Annelise Heinz, a historian at the University of Oregon who has written about the game's American history, told Good Housekeeping that "mahjong has had multiple waves of popularity in America over the past century. What we're seeing now feels different because it's being driven by a genuine need for connection and community. Those needs aren't going away."

That hunger has been well documented. The New York Times has chronicled a loneliness epidemic reshaping American life, while Gallup data shows young adults drinking less than previous generations did at the same age. Mahjong fits the moment because it is social, slow, alcohol-optional and impossible to play alone.

Why Mahjong Styles Vary So Widely Across Cultures

Walk into one game and you might find players using Chinese rules. Walk into another and the cards, scoring and tile sets will look completely different. That diversity is part of the game's appeal, and it reflects more than a century of immigration history.

Nicole Wong, founder of The Mahjong Project and an author who has documented house rules across the Asian diaspora, told Good Housekeeping that immigrants brought their own versions of the game with them, leading to "the wonderful diversity of styles you can find and play here today."

Chinese, Taiwanese, Japanese, Filipino and American variations all coexist, which is why spellings range from "mahjong" to "mah jong" to "mah-jongg" depending on the tradition. Players often learn one style first and pick up others over time.

Why Mahjong May Be Good for Your Brain

The cognitive payoff is part of the draw, especially for older players. A recent study in the Journal of Cognitive Enhancement found that older adults with mild cognitive impairment who took part in mentally stimulating hobbies showed better memory, attention and processing speed than peers who did not.

Mahjong fits squarely into that category. It demands pattern recognition, short-term memory, strategic planning and constant social interaction, all in one sitting. For families with aging parents and grandparents, that combination is a meaningful argument for clearing space on the dining table.

Geoff Engelstein, an award-winning tabletop game designer, told the New York Times that the impulse to gather around games is older than recorded history. "Games go back thousands and thousands of years. The earliest tombs that they've found have dice in them. They very rarely find any kind of archaeological excavation without some kind of game playing. It's really just part of the human experience."

What the Mahjong Boom Means for Community Spaces

The Eventbrite-reported surge is showing up in coffee shops, libraries, senior centers and Gen Z meetups branded around nostalgia and so-called granny-core hobbies. For local businesses, that opens an opportunity to host beginner nights, league play and intergenerational tournaments.

For everyone else, it is a low-stakes way to swap the doomscroll for something that ends with a winner, a story and four people who actually talked to each other for two hours. As Heinz put it, the underlying need for connection is not going away.

Copyright 2026 Us Weekly. All rights reserved

This story was originally published June 24, 2026 at 7:50 AM.

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