Old german card game


















Likewise, persons must have the first 4 mackers before collecting for the fifth macker. Players may choose to pay mackers both ways. This means that players not only collect macker earnings when they complete their bid, but also when players set another individual or partners when they have mackers.

This means that an individual or partners must pay the value of the bid and the value of any mackers they had. First and Last is another way to reward individuals or partners for exceptional play. First and last can be collected on all bids except kickers, bloncos, and bull solos. Solo is a challenging and rewarding game. On paper the rules seem a bit complicated. If you are a first time player, read through the rules carefully.

Don't get frustrated with concepts you do not understand. The best way to learn is to dive in and play with others who know the game. I hope these rules make it a bit easier for you. German Solo This game is generally just known as Solo. The name German Solo is used on this page to distinguish this game from various other games called Solo, such as: Solo Whist - a descendant of Boston Whist played in Britain, Australia and New Zealand.

Number of Players Solo is a 4 to 6 player game. Overview Solo is played with 32 cards from a standard 52 card deck. The current bid determines the trump value of each card, as described below. Bidding Scheme - in increasing order Question The bidder and a partner must get 5 tricks. Anything can be trump. The ace cannot be the same suit as trump. Clubs must be trump.

Bidder must have at least one club to bid IsIt. The bidder cannot call the ace of clubs. Nothing is trump. Aces are high and 7s are low. All players must follow suit when possible. Anyone playing against a kicker need not throw their highest card of the suit, but they must follow suit. Person throwing the highest card of the current trick starts the next trick. Multiple kickers can be played per hand. If the bidder can go solo do not bid this. Play a solo! It pays more. If the bidder cannot go solo, the bidder must set both ladies on the table.

The bidder's partner makes trump. The bidder needs to get 5 tricks alone. Only one solo can be played per hand. IsIt Solo Used when one person has already bid solo. The bidder wants to go Solo in clubs. Start with 12 cards laid out face up in three rows of four. Four additional cards are placed face down on the table. You need to rearrange the cards at the top so that they run from Ace to King. Place the additional cards under the correct suits in order.

Now draw a card from the deck and place it where it belongs, if possible. If you pull a King, you can start a new row. To play this game, shuffle a standard card deck, then lay out four rows of four cards face up.

In these 16 cards, you look for two cards of the same suit with a total value of These pairs can now be laid aside and the gaps filled with new cards taken from the deck.

The goal of the game is to use up the deck and get rid of all the cards. This game is basically played the same as Go Fish. The goal is to get four of the same type of card four sixes in all the suits, for example.

Each player asks another player for a card they need to make a set of four. If the player has the card, they have to hand it over. Although you can play Quartett with a standard card deck, most kids play with a special deck that features animals facts, trains, planes and automobiles, famous sports stars, etc.

The composition is the same as for the 32 cards pack, but with eights and sevens omitted. It is used for the two-player game Sechsundsechzig In and around Nuremberg, the card Franconian or Bavarian pack is used to play Dreeg , a four-player game made up of several different sub-games based on In Bavaria, Schafkopf is nowadays often played with this reduced pack.

There are two forms of this. One is a doubled version of the 24 card pack, and is used for Doppelkopf , in south-east Germany, where German suited cards are in general use.

The second version has sevens instead of nines two each of A K O U 10 7 in each suit. These are the cards used in most of the country for the German national card game Skat. Games played elsewhere with 52 cards are sometimes played with 32 cards in Germany - for example Mau-Mau the German version of Crazy Eights and even Poker. They are used for Sechsundsechzig 66 , and the game Kujong , played in the Eifel region and across the border in Luxembourg, also uses this pack.

This is a doubled form of the 24 card pack, used for Doppelkopf , which is popular throughout northern Germany. Often it is played with only 40 cards, omitting the nines. The international 52 card pack is used in Germany as elsewhere for Bridge.



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