-
Yaniv (card game)
Yaniv (Hebrew יניב) or Yanif is an Israeli card game, especially popular among travelers. It is played with a 54 card deck - the standard international deck with two jokers.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yaniv_(card_game)
-
Trente et Quarante
Trente et Quarante (Thirty and Forty), also called Rouge et Noir (Red and Black), is a 17th-century gambling card game of French origin played with cards and a special table. It is rarely found in US casinos, but still very popular in Continental Europe casinos, and one of the two games played in the gambling rooms at Monte Carlo, roulette being the other. It is a simple game that usually gives the players a very good expected return of more than 98%.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trente_et_Quarante
-
Three card brag
Three card brag is a 16th-century British card game, and the British national representative of the vying or "bluffing" family of gambling games. Brag is a direct descendant of the Elizabethan game of Primero and one of the several ancestors to poker, just varying in betting style and hand rankings.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_card_brag
-
Teen patti
Teen Patti (तीन पत्ती) ("three cards" in English) (also known as Flash or Flush) is a gambling card game that originated in the Indian Subcontinent. The game, which is actually a simplified version of poker, is popular throughout South Asia. Boats out of India call it "flush" to escape any legal negativity surrounding the game where it is still be played legally.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teen_patti
-
Speculation (card game)
Speculation is a simple gambling card game that was popular in the late 18th century and early 19th century.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speculation_(card_game)
-
Rummoli
Rummoli is a family card game for 2 to 8 people. This Canadian board game, first marketed in 1940 by the Copp Clark Publishing Company of Toronto requires a Rummoli board, a deck of playing cards (52 cards, no jokers), and chips or coins to play. The game is usually played for fun, or for small stakes (e.g. Canadian Dimes). Rummoli is similar to Michigan Rummy.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rummoli
-
Ranter-Go-Round
Ranter-Go-Round (also known as Chase the Ace, Cuckoo, Bohemian Poker, or Screw Your Neighbor) is a card game with bluffing elements.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranter-Go-Round
-
Quinze
Quinze, Quince, also known as Ace-low, is a 17th-century French card game of Spanish origin that was much patronized in some parts of Europe. It is considered a forerunner of the French Vingt-et-un, a game very popular at the court of Louis XV, and also a two-player simplification of the modern game of Blackjack.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quinze
-
Property of a Lady
Property of a Lady is a card game.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Property_of_a_Lady
-
Primo visto
Primo visto, Primavista, Prima-vista, Primi-vist, Primiuiste, Primofistula, or even Primefisto, is a 16th-century gambling card game fashionable c. 1530-1640. Very little is known about this game, but judging by the etymology of the words used to describe the many local variants of the game, it appears to be one of Italian origin.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primo_visto
-
Primero
Primero, Prime, Primus, Primiera, Primavista, often referred to as "Poker’s mother", as it is the first confirmed version of a game directly related to modern day poker, is a 16th-century gambling card game of which the earliest reference dates back to 1526. The game of Primero is closely related to the game of Primo visto, if not the same.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primero
-
Post and Pair
Post and Pair is a 16th-century English gambling card game based on the same three-card combinations, namely Prial, found in related game of this family. It is much depended on vying, or betting, requiring repeated staking as well as daring on the part of the players. It is considered a derivative on the game of Primero and closely resembles Put, having been as popular as Gleek and Noddy during the Tudor Dynasty.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post_and_Pair
-
Poker
Poker is a family of gambling card games. All poker variants involve betting as an intrinsic part of play, and determine the winner of each hand according to the combinations of players' cards, at least some of which remain hidden until the end of the hand. Poker games vary in the number of cards dealt, the number of shared or "community" cards, the number of cards that remain hidden, and the betting procedures.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poker
-
Pok Deng
Pok Deng (Thai: ป๊อกเด้ง) is a Thai gambling card game in which players aim for a hand whose ones digit beats the dealer's, while taking into account pairs, three of a kinds, and flushes. The game is also known as Pok Kao (Thai: ป๊อกเก้า, kao means "nine") or Pok Paet Pok Kao (Thai: ป๊อกแปดป๊อกเก้า, paet means "eight") due to eights and nines being high, desirable values.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pok_Deng
-
Pasur (card game)
Pasur (Persian: پاسور; also spelled Pasoor) is a card game of Persian origin. Played widely in Iran, it is played similarly to the Italian game of Cassino and even more similarly to the Egyptian game of Bastra. Pasur is also known by the names Chahâr Barg (4 cards), Haft Khâj (seven clubs) or Haft Va Chahâr, Yâzdah (7+4=11, the significance being that players want to win 7 clubs in a game of 4-card hands where 11 is a winning number).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pasur_(card_game)
-
Monte Bank
Monte Bank, Mountebank, Spanish Monte and Mexican Monte, sometimes just Monte, is a Spanish gambling card game and the national card game of Mexico. It ultimately derives from basset, where the banker (dealer) pays on matching cards. The term "monte" has also been used for a variety of other gambling games, especially varieties of three-card poker, and for the swindle three-card monte.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monte_Bank
-
Lansquenet
Lansquenet (derived from the French spelling of German Landsknecht ('servant of the land or country'), applied to a mercenary soldier) is a card game. Lansquenet also refers to 15th- and 16th-century German foot soldiers; the lansquenet drum is a type of field drum used by these soldiers.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lansquenet
-
Indian (card game)
Indian is a very simple card game that involves a surprising amount of strategy. The counter-intuitive gameplay and involved scoring lend for an interesting and strategic game, and experienced players will beat inexperienced players more often than not.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_(card_game)
-
Grobhäusern
Grobhäusern is a historical German vying game in which players bet and then compare their 4-card combinations. It is played by two to eight players using a 32-card piquet pack. The game was illegal in most places.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grobh%C3%A4usern
-
Goofspiel
Goofspiel, also known as The Game of Pure Strategy or GOPS, is a card game for two or more players. It was invented by Merrill Flood while at Princeton University in the 1930s, and Alex Randolph describes a similar game as having been popular with the 5th Indian Army during the Second World War.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goofspiel
-
Gleek (card game)
Gleek is an English card game for three persons. It is played with a 44-card pack and was popular from the 16th century through the 18th century.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gleek_(card_game)
-
Ghost player position
In some games involving two or more players a ghost player takes the place of a human player in order to make a game more challenging, to add new dynamics to various rules or to compensate for a missing player.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_player_position
-
Edge sorting
Edge sorting is a technique used in advantage gambling where a player determines whether a face-down playing card is likely to be low or high at casino table games by observing and exploiting subtle unintentional differences on the backs of some types of card, after persuading a croupier to cooperate by unwittingly sorting the cards into low and high. Some packs of cards produced by some manufacturers have an unintentional irregularity. Typically all the backs of the cards in such a pack are identical, but the two long edges of each card are consistently distinguishable: the pattern is not symmetrical to a 180° rotation (half a full turn). During the course of a game, a player will ask the dealer, a casino employee, to rotate some face-up cards, perhaps saying they feel it will bring them luck. The dealer does not realise that cards are being turned so that low cards, typically, 6, 7, 8, or 9 are one way round, high cards the other way round, and that the edges are different. The dealer is also asked to shuffle the cards with an automatic shuffler, which does not change the orientation as a manual shuffle may do. The dealer is not obliged to comply with these requests, but will usually do so if thought to be due to gamblers' superstition or mistrust. Over the course of a game, low cards will tend to be oriented one way, high cards the other. Once a significant proportion of cards have been rotated, any player who knows this can gain a statistical edge more than outweighing house edge by using the knowledge whether the card to be turned is likely to be low or high.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edge_sorting
-
Crossfire (card game)
Crossfire is a card game for 2 or more people in which the aim is to win more rounds than your opponent. You can win rounds by getting the highest card above a neutral card.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crossfire_(card_game)
-
Crash (card game)
Crash is a British card game extension of Nine-card Brag. In Crash, there is no betting, as in Brag, but rather players aim to reach a total of 11 points, gained over successive deals, or else to 'crash', meaning to win the game outright by means of winning all four tricks in one deal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crash_(card_game)
-
Commune (card game)
Commune is a bluffing-based card game that requires knowledge of the poker hands and much strategic thinking. It is best played in a large group of people, and does not require use of a table or playing surface. Gameplay is similar to Liar's dice or Liar's poker.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commune_(card_game)
-
Chor Voli
Chor Voli is an Afghan card game, which was described by Gyula Zsigri in 1992.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chor_Voli
-
Brelan
Brelan (O. Fr. brelenc, hence a name for a card player, gambler or the name of the place where the game was played.), is a famous French vying game with rapidly escalating bets from the seventeenth to nineteenth century. The game is quite similar to the game of Bouillotte, but it is not played anymore.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brelan
-
Bouillotte
Bouillotte is an 18th-century French gambling card game of the Revolution based on Brelan, very popular during the 19th century in France and again for some years from 1830. It was also popular in America. The game is regarded as one of the games that influenced the open-card stud variation in poker. It also gave rise to the Bouillotte lamp, consisting of one or several candlesticks with a central standard equipped with a non-flammable adjustable shade. often made of tôle, a painted or lacquered metal, reflective white on the inside, dark on the outside, that could be lowered as the candles burned down.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bouillotte
-
Blackjack
Blackjack, also known as twenty-one, is the most widely played casino banking game in the world. Blackjack is a comparing card game between a player and dealer, meaning players compete against the dealer but not against other players. It is played with one or more decks of 52 cards. The object of the game is to beat the dealer in one of the following ways:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackjack
-
Bingo (card game)
Bingo or bango is a card game named by analogy to the game bingo. The game is played with a bridge deck of 52 cards. The dealer gives each player X cards, which are held in the hand or placed face-down in front of the player. The dealer places Y cards face down in the center of the table. Typically X=Y=5.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bingo_(card_game)
-
Bastra
Bastra, the Greek deformation of the Arabic word Basra, which is also a similar game played in Egypt, Lebanon and other Middle-Eastern countries, is a popular fishing card game similar to Cassino very popular in Cyprus. In Turkey, the game is known as Pişti or Paşta.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bastra
-
Bank (card game)
Bank, also known also as "Polish Bank" or "Russian Bank," is the name of a comparing card game. The game requires a standard 52-card deck and five or six players.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bank_(card_game)
-
Baccarat (card game)
Baccarat (/ˈbækərɑː/; French: ) is a card game played at casinos. There are three popular variants of the game: punto banco (or "North American baccarat"), baccarat chemin de fer (or "chemmy"), and baccarat banque (or "à deux tableaux"). Punto banco is strictly a game of chance, with no skill or strategy involved; each player's moves are forced by the cards the player is dealt. In baccarat chemin de fer and baccarat banque, by contrast, both players can make choices, which allows skill to play a part. Despite this, the winning odds are in favour of the bank, with a house edge no lower than around 1 percent.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baccarat_(card_game)
-
Ambigu
Ambigu is a French card game, composed of the characteristic elements of whist, bouillotte and piquet. A whist pack with the court cards deleted is used, and from two to six persons may play. Each player is given an equal number of counters, and a limit of betting is agreed upon.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambigu
-
Acey Deucey (card game)
Acey Deucey, also known as In-Between or Sheets, is a simple card game that involves betting.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acey_Deucey_(card_game)