Shedding-type Game
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Shedding-type Game
A shedding-type card game is a game in which the player's objective is to empty one's hand of all cards before all other players. Games with action/power/trick cards In these games, players win by having the fewest points. * Crazy Eights * Craits * One Card (game), One Card * Cabo (game), Cabo * Switch (card game), Switch Progressively add rules * Bartok (card game), Bartok * Mao (card game), Mao One suit per player * Red nines One deck per pair Players play in pairs, shed sets of cards for points and win by reaching a certain point value. * Biriba * Canasta Different trump suit per player * Bauernheinrich, Farmer Henry Bluffing * Cheat (game), Cheat Proprietary * Boom-O * Castle (card game), Castle * Phase 10 * Scrabble Slam! * Taki (card game), Taki * Uno (card game), Uno * Whot Miscellaneous * Cards in the hat * Speed (card game), Speed Other

* Pits (card game), Pits {{Tabletop games by type Card game terminology Shedding-type card games, ...
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Shithead
Shithead is a derogatory term for a person who is Ignorance, ignorant, narrow minded, cruel or unintelligent. It is generally considered to be a vulgar and profanity, profane term. It may also refer to: * Shithead (card game) * "Shithead", a song by The Haunted found on the album ''One Kill Wonder'' * Shithead, name of a dog owned by Navin R. Johnson (Steve Martin) in the film ''The Jerk'' (1979) * Joey Keithley, Joey "Shithead" Keithley, punk musician from the band D.O.A. * Shithead, a character in the comic book ''Wanted (comics), Wanted'' See also

* Chicken shit {{disambig ...
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Boom-O
Boom-O is a card game from the Ninety-Nine family of games. Boom-O is from the makers of Uno, Mattel. The aim is to keep the timer below 60 seconds. Otherwise, the player may "blow up". Gameplay Each player is dealt 7 cards and three time bomb cards called "lives". Most of the cards in the deck either increase or decrease the timer total of points in the game. Other cards in the pack include similar Uno commands such as Skip, Reverse, Draw 1 or 2 and Trade Hands. Players put down one card per turn attempting to decrease the number of cards in their hand while keeping the timer total under 60 seconds. If a player can't play a card, they must turn over one of their three time bombs, losing a life. If a player clears all cards in their hand, all other players flip one of their time bombs rendering them the winner. Whoever has all three of their time bomb cards flipped over is out of the game. The survivor wins. See also *Ninety-nine (addition card game) Ninety-nine is a sim ...
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Pits (card Game)
Pits is a five player card game, a cross between whist and rummy, with the objective of playing all your cards first. It is played with a 54 card pack (4 suits and 2 jokers). Threes are low, Aces high, Twos even higher and Jokers highest. Once all the cards are dealt (the dealer getting 10, the others 11), the dealer plays a meld; one of a singleton, "n" of a kind, a run of 3 or more singletons or a run of three or more "n" of a kinds. For example a run of 4 pairs might be . Subsequent players either pass or play a higher set of the same meld, e.g. {8,8,9,9,10,10,J,J}. Twos and Jokers are wild (they may represent any card), but 2s may not be played in runs of singletons, neither as a 2 nor as a wild card. Using wild cards, it is possible to play a meld of "10 of a kind" - 4 genuine cards, 4 twos and 2 jokers. A run of singletons that is all in the same suit (jokers counting for any suit) is better than a run of different suits, and a 'natural' meld is better than an otherwise equal ...
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Speed (card Game)
Speed is a game for two players or more of the shedding family of card games, in which players try to get rid of all of their cards first. How to deal Each player is dealt five cards to form a hand and 15 cards face down to the side as a draw pile. Play With two players, the round begins when the players flip one of the face-down cards in the centre simultaneously. Players must then discard their hand cards one by one, using only one hand, matching cards so that each card played is either one number above, one number below, or the same number as the two cards on top of the center stacks. This must be done without hesitating to shuffle cards or otherwise delay the game. Only one card can be placed at a time. The ace and king can be placed on top of one another, forming a looping sequence. Whenever the number of cards in a player's hand drops below five, the player has to take more cards from the draw pile to bring it back up to five cards until the draw pile is depleted. W ...
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Cards In The Hat
Cards in the hat, or card flip, is a card throwing game in which the players throw playing cards into a hat or other receptacle. The game requires concentration and some skill. Gameplay A hat or shoe box is placed on the floor, and a mark is determined from where each player will throw, known as the "oche". The first player steps up to the oche with five cards and attempts to throw them, one at a time, into the hat. Each card landing in the hat gains one point for the player. In another version of the game, each player plays with the entire pack of 52 cards. See also * Card throwing Card throwing is the art of throwing standard playing cards with great accuracy or force. It is performed both as part of stage magic shows and as a competitive physical feat among magicians, with official records existing for longest distance th ... References {{reflist External linksLady Luck: the theory of probabilityon Google Books.Magic: the GatheringA Search Engine For Cards Playing ca ...
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Whot
Whot is a card game played with non-standard deck in five suits: circles, crosses, triangles, stars and squares. It is a shedding game similar to Crazy Eights and was one of the first commercial games based on this family. The game has been adapted into different formats, the most popular of which in Africa is the Nigerian Whot Game, where it has been described at Nigeria's national card game. Origins The game was invented by William Henry Storey a game designer and printer from Southend-on-Sea, Essex, England. Storey trademarked Whot in 1935, and it was originally published by W.H. Storey & Co. Ltd. of Croydon. Waddingtons Waddingtons was a British manufacturer of card and board games. The company was founded by John Waddington of Leeds, England and the manager, actor and playwright Wilson Barrett, under the name ''Waddingtons Limited''. The name was changed in ... acquired the game and it was popular in Britain in the 1950s and 60s and printed until the 1990s. The nam ...
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Uno (card Game)
Uno (; from Spanish and Italian for 'one'; stylized as UNO) is an American shedding-type card game that is played with a specially printed deck. The game's general principles put it into the crazy eights family of card games, and it is similar to the traditional European game mau-mau. It has been a Mattel brand since 1992. History The game was originally developed in 1971 by Merle Robbins in Reading, Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati. When his family and friends began to play more and more, he spent $8,000 to have 5,000 copies of the game made. He sold it from his barbershop at first, and local businesses began to sell it as well. Robbins later sold the rights to Uno to a group of friends headed by Robert Tezak, a funeral parlor owner in Joliet, Illinois, for $50,000 plus royalties of 10 cents per game. Tezak formed International Games, Inc., to market Uno, with offices behind his funeral parlor. The games were produced by Lewis Saltzman of Saltzman Printers in Maywood, Illin ...
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Taki (card Game)
Taki ( he, טאקי) is a card game developed by Israeli game inventor Haim Shafir. The game is an advanced variant of Crazy Eights (which is played with regular deck of playing cards) with a special card deck and extended game options. In its basic form it resembles UNO. It was introduced in 1983 by Shafir Games. The game cards were designed by Israeli artist Ari Ron. Game overview Each player follows the preceding card, laid on the table, with a card of the same color or figure. Special cards may change the direction of play, skip a player's turn, make other players draw cards, change the color and allow a player to discard more than one card. The game includes 112 cards (2 identical sets of 56). The object of the game is to discard all the cards in your hand. Rules The cards are shuffled and each player receives eight. The rest of the deck becomes the draw pile. The top card in the draw pile is turned over and placed face up next to the draw pile to form a discard pile. The up ...
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Scrabble Slam!
''Scrabble'' is a word game in which two to four players score points by placing tiles, each bearing a single letter, onto a game board divided into a 15×15 grid of squares. The tiles must form words that, in crossword fashion, read left to right in rows or downward in columns and are included in a standard dictionary or lexicon. The name ''Scrabble'' is a trademark of Mattel in most of the world, except in the United States and Canada, where it is a trademark of Hasbro, under the brands of both of its subsidiaries, Milton Bradley and Parker Brothers. The game is sold in 121 countries and is available in more than 30 languages; approximately 150 million sets have been sold worldwide, and roughly one-third of American and half of British homes have a ''Scrabble'' set. There are approximately 4,000 ''Scrabble'' clubs around the world. Game details The game is played by two to four players on a square game board imprinted with a 15×15 grid of cells (individually known as "sq ...
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Phase 10
Phase 10 is a card game created in 1982 by Kenneth Johnson and sold by Mattel, which purchased the rights from Fundex Games in 2010. Phase 10 is based on a variant of rummy known as contract rummy. It consists of a special deck equivalent to two regular decks of cards, and can be played by two to six people. The game is named after the ten phases (or melds) that a player must advance through in order to win. Many people shorten the game by aligning it to baseball rules and consider 5.5 phases to be a complete game when running out of time to complete the full ten phases. Whoever is in the lead when play stops if someone has completed 5.5 phases or more is the winner. Phase 10 was Fundex's best selling product, selling over 62,600,000 units as of 2016, making it the 2nd best-selling commercial card game behind Mattel's Uno. In December 2010, Fundex sold its license rights to Phase 10 to Mattel. Objective The object of the game is to be the first person to complete all t ...
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Castle (card Game)
''Castle'' (also known as ''Palace'') is a card game designed by Bruno Faidutti, Francesca Flores, and Serge Laget Serge Laget ( – January 2023) was a French board game designer. He also worked as an education advisor near Avignon. Biography In 2003, Laget created the board game ''Mare Nostrum'' and its successor, ''Mare Nostrum: Mythology Expansion'', two ..., played with 2-5 players. It is a shedding card game, i.e. the winning player is the one who disposes of all of their cards (in hand and personal deck) first. Game play This game was made by Francesca Flores. Each player begins the game with a hand of cards. The number of cards in hand and deck depend upon the number of players in the game. The remaining cards go into a draw pile. The players' castles are built in front of them. The game begins when the person with the lowest card lays a card. Deal Cards are dealt 3 at a time, the first set of three dealt to each player is placed face-down. These cards cannot be s ...
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Cheat (game)
Cheat (also known as Bluff, Bullshit, Liar or I Doubt ItGuide to games: Discarding games: How to play cheat, The Guardian, 22 November 2008retrieved 28 March 2011) is a card game where the players aim to get rid of all of their cards.The Pan Book of Card Games, p288, PAN, 1960 (second edition), Hubert PhillipsThe Oxford A-Z of Card Games, David Parlett, Oxford University Press, It is a game of deception, with cards being played face-down and players being permitted to lie about the cards they have played. A challenge is usually made by players calling out the name of the game, and the loser of a challenge has to pick up every card played so far. Cheat is classed as a party game. As with many card games, cheat has an oral tradition and so people are taught the game under different names. Rules One pack of 52 cards is used for four or fewer players; games with five or more players generally combine two 52-card packs. The cards are shuffled and dealt as evenly as possible among t ...
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