Free 101 Okey Scoreboard

Track scores for your 101 Okey games across every phone at the table in real time. No install, no sign-up — create a room, share the PIN, and the scoreboard, round history, and AI win predictions stay in sync for all four players.

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One game, one PIN. Totals reset when the last round is played.

Player Names (at least 4):

Popular Strategies

Tracking 101 Okey scores online — the assistant built for the table

101 Okey is the most popular strategic variant of the classic Turkish tile game Okey. Four players, 106 tiles, twenty-one in your rack, an indicator that decides which tile is the joker, and a single non-negotiable rule that gives the game its name: you must reach 101 points before you can lay a single tile on the table. Players outside Turkey often discover the game through a Turkish friend, a holiday on the south coast, or a relative's living-room evening, and ask the same first question: how do you keep score?

The traditional answer is a sheet of paper, a pen, and one mathematician at the table whose job is mostly to not make arithmetic mistakes after the second glass of tea. The other answer is what this site exists to be: a fast, free, multilingual scoreboard that all four phones at the table can share in real time, with no app to install and no account to create.

Why a digital scoreboard matters

101 Okey scoring rewards careful play, not careful arithmetic. The opening penalty (a flat 101 points, with extras for the okey or for finishing on a çift okey), the doubling on a hand finished with the joker pair, the running totals that decide who has to leave the round on the 200-point fence — none of it is hard, but all of it has to be right. One arithmetic error in the second game propagates: a player who should have been sitting out is still in, the wrong player is out, and the totals at the end of the night reward the wrong winner. Real arguments have started over quieter mistakes than that.

A scoreboard that does the math for you frees the table to do the only thing that matters at the table: play. Tiles, jokers, the shape of the rack, a quiet read on what the player to your left is collecting — that is the game. Pen and paper have always been a tax on it.

What this assistant does that a notebook doesn't

Three things, mostly:

  • It stays in sync across every phone at the table. Create a room, share the six-character PIN, and every player sees the same scoreboard. There is no host, no master device — anyone can enter the round result and the others see it within the second. If a phone goes offline mid-round, it catches up automatically when the connection returns.
  • It explains the rules when someone forgets. First-time players, drop-in guests, the cousin who only learned the home version — every page links to the canonical 101 Okey rules in your language, including the parts the official rule sheet glosses over: the difference between okey and sahte okey tiles, when çift okey doubles a win, how the joker wraps around at red 13 to red 1.
  • It learns from every game. A small machine-learning model trained on completed rounds offers a soft win-probability for each player after each round. It is not a coach — nobody at the table needs to be told what to discard — but it is a fair, neutral measure of how the night is going. Best-of-five matches feel different when everyone can see the curve.

Free, ad-supported, no account

There is no signup, no email, no payment. The site is free to use because the content pages — the rules guide, the FAQ, the strategy blog, the comparison article on Okey vs. 101 Okey — carry a small number of Google ads. The scoreboard itself is ad-free and stays that way. Cookies are functional only unless you opt in; nothing about your match is shared off the device beyond what is needed to keep the four phones at the table in sync.

If you have never played 101 Okey, the rules guide will get you to your first opening in about ten minutes. If you have, the join-by-PIN box at the top of this page is one tap and a six-character code away from your next game. Welcome to the table.