Point Tarock
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Point Tarock was a three-player
tarot card game Tarot games are card games played with tarot decks, that is, decks with numbered permanent trumps parallel to the suit cards. The games and decks which English-speakers call by the French name Tarot are called Tarocchi in the original Italian, ...
, played mainly in Austria, which used the 54-card ''
Industrie und Glück ''Industrie und Glück'' (Early Modern German for "Diligence and Fortune") is a pattern of French suited playing cards used to play tarock. The name originates from an inscription found on the second trump card. This deck was developed during t ...
'' deck. It is probably extinct. Furr describes it as being "identical to Tapp but for the addition of a special announcement, allowing a Declarer to capitalize on a very good hand... spicing up the game considerably." Point Tarock is sometimes confused with its close cousin,
Illustrated Tarock Illustrated Tarock (german: Illustriertes Tarock) or Illustrated Dreiertarock is an Austrian card game that has been described as the "queen" of all three-handed Tarock games played with the 54-card pack. It was thought by Mayr and Sedlaczek to ...
.


History and etymology

Point Tarock is one of a family of classical Austrian card games known as Tarock games; so much so, that the area of the former
Austro-Hungarian Empire Austria-Hungary, often referred to as the Austro-Hungarian Empire,, the Dual Monarchy, or Austria, was a constitutional monarchy and great power in Central Europe between 1867 and 1918. It was formed with the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of ...
, in which they have a strong tradition, has been described as 'Tarockania'.''Tarockania''
at web.archive.org. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
These games have been featured in literature such as Herzmanovsky-Orlando's ''Masquerade of the Genii'' and Johann Nestroy's ''Zu ebener Erde und im ersten Stock''. There are numerous variations of Tarock, many still played today, including the challenging four-player games of
Königrufen Königrufen or Königsrufen (German: "Call the King") is a four-player, trick-taking card game of the Tarot card games, tarot family, played in Austria and Southern Tyrol, with variants for two, three and six players. As with other regional tarot ...
(the "game of kings"),
Zwanzigerrufen Zwanzigerrufen or Zwanz'gerrufen is the leading trick-taking card game of the Tarock family in many regions of eastern Austria. Its rules are simpler than the game of Königrufen which is more widely played in the whole of Austria. As is common in ...
and
Neunzehnerrufen Neunzehnerrufen (German: "Call the Nineteen") is an Austrian card game of the Tarock (tarot) family for four players. Under the name Taroky or Czech Taroky it is the national Tarock variant of the Czech Republic and Slovakia, but - with certain var ...
, the original three-handed game of
Tapp Tarock Tapp Tarock (german: Tapp-Tarock), also called Viennese Tappen (german: Wiener Tappen), Tappen or Tapper, is a three-player tarot card game which traditionally uses the 54-card Industrie und Glück deck. Before the ''Anschluss'' (1938), it was the ...
and its derivatives, and the "attractive" two-hander of
Strawman Tarock Strohmandeln, also called Strohmandel, Strohmanntarock, Strohmanntarok, Zweiertarock, Strawman Tarock or Straw Man Tarock, is an old, two-hand card game from the Austrian branch of the Tarock (card games), Tarock family. It takes its name from the ...
.Kastner, Hugo (2005). "König- oder Zwanz'ger-rufen? Nein, Strohmandeln!" in ''Kartenspiele'', p. 38. The earliest known rules for Point Tarock are recorded (as Illustrated Tarock) by Löw in 1954 where he describes it as played "according to the rules of the normal Tarock game differing... only in the fact that there are new announcements" which the declarer can make and which commit him or her to winning additional points. In 1965, Beck switches the names of the two games referring to this version now as Point Tarock (''Pointtarock'') . He continues to do so for the next two decades. The only subsequent record of its rules is published by Alscher in 2004 where, again it is referred to as Illustrated Tarock, a name that, however, has become increasingly associated with its more popular and complex cousin.


Name

There is no consensus over the name of this game, which was variously called Point Tarock or Illustrated Tarock (''Illustriertes Tarock''). Confusingly its more complex cousin is also called Illustrated Tarock or Point Tarock or both. Since ''illustriertes'' implies "embellished", there is a logic in using Point Tarock for this variant which involves point-bidding and Illustrated Tarock for the more complex variant that is embellished (Dummett suggests "embroidered") with additional announcements and bonuses. The game may in any case now be obsolete, being noticeably absent from Bamberger's successor to Löw's and Beck's Tarock series.


Cards

The game is played with the 54-card French-suited ''
Industrie und Glück ''Industrie und Glück'' (Early Modern German for "Diligence and Fortune") is a pattern of French suited playing cards used to play tarock. The name originates from an inscription found on the second trump card. This deck was developed during t ...
'' deck. It includes 22 trumps numbered in Roman numerals with the exception of the highest, the ''Sküs'' or Fool. The second highest trump, the XXI, is known as the ''Mond'' while the lowest trump, I, is called the ''Pagat''. The ''Sküs'', ''Mond'', and ''Pagat'' are together known as the ''
Trull Trull is a village, electoral ward and civil parish in Somerset, England, situated near Taunton. The parish which includes Dipford has a population of 2,288. History The name Trull is thought to derive from the word ''Trendle'' meaning circl ...
'' or "Honours" and are worth 5 points each. Other trumps are worth only 1 point. The 32 plain suit cards consist of four courts: King, Queen, Cavalier and Valet, along with four pip cards. The cards rank as follows: *In black suits: King, Queen, Cavalier and Valet 10, 9, 8 and 7 *In red suits: King, Queen, Cavalier and Valet, 1, 2, 3 and 4. Kings and Honours are worth 5 points, Queens 4, Cavaliers 3, Valets 2, and the pips 1. Like score counting in other Tarock games, 2 points are subtracted from each trick taken. There are 70 card points in each deal, so to win, the Declarer needs at least 36 points. Other than card points there are bonus points as described below.


Differences from Illustrated Tarock

Point Tarock is sometimes called Illustrated Tarock, for example by Furr, while others, such as Bamberger and Dummett, refer to Illustrated Tarock as Point Tarock. The main differences are: * Point Tarock has no ''Zweiblatt'' ("Two Card") or ''Einblatt'' ("One Card") contracts * The only announcements are those that offer to score specific numbers of points over 36 (hence the name) * Announcements may be made before or after exchanging with the talon; this affects the value of the contract


Rules


Shuffling and dealing

Dealing takes places as in other three-hand Tarock games. After the cards have been shuffled and cut, the dealer sets out six cards face down on the table (the ''talon'') and then deals each player 16 cards, anticlockwise, in two packets of eight each.


Bidding

Forehand The forehand in tennis and other racket sports such as table tennis, squash and badminton is a shot made by swinging the racket across one's body with the hand moving palm-first. In tennis, except in the context of the phrase ''forehand volley ...
, to the right of the dealer, now opens the bidding with "pass" or ''Dreier''. Middlehand may also pass or raise to an ''Untern''. The dealer, rearhand (''Hinterhand''), may pass or raise. Apart from ''Solo'', the contracts must be bid for in ascending order. A player who has been overbid by a 'younger' or more 'junior' player may "hold" and has positional priority unless overbid again. The highest bidder becomes the declarer and plays alone against the other two players (the "defenders"). The bidding increments are as follows: * ''Dreier'' - 3 game points. * ''Unterer'' - 4 game points. * ''Oberer'' - 5 game points. In each case, the declarer exposes the ''talon'', lays out the cards in order and takes either the first or last three cards from the talon. The declarer then discards three cards from her hand and places it onto her trick pile, these three count as her first trick. Kings or Trull cards may not be discarded; other trumps can't be discarded unless there is no other option. All discarded cards must be shown to the defenders. The remaining cards from the ''talon'' are added to the defenders' trick pile.


Announcements

Once the declarer has exchanged with the talon, she must decide how good her hand is and then announce the number of card points she will contract to win. The options attract ''additional'' game points and are as follows: * ''with 40'' - 3 game points * ''with 45'' - 6 game points * ''with 50'' - 10 game points * ''with 55'' - 15 game points Bids are cumulative i.e. each bid also includes the lower ones and may be '' kontra'd'' in whole or in part. So the declarer may announce "with 50!" and an opponent may say "Kontra the 50!" which means the kontra only applies to scores of 50 or more.


Bonuses

The rules on bonuses are variable but typically include: * ''Pagat Ultimo'': any player wins the last trick with Trump I, the Pagat * ''Valat'': player takes all tricks


Winning

If the declarer achieves her target, she wins the points above. If she announced "with 50" but only scores 46 card points, she pays each defender 1 point i.e. 10 points for the lost "with 50" minus 3+6 for the won "with 40" and "with 45".


Footnotes


References


Bibliography

* * * * * * * *


External links


''Illustrated Tapp''
at tarocchino.com. {{Tarot and Tarock card games Tarock card games Three-player card games Austrian card games Card games introduced in the 1950s