Racehorse Rummy Card Game
From the Box: 'Five games to play with cards featuring favorite Breyer horses: No More Horses, Hold Your Horses, Color Rummy, Classic Rummy, Horse Memory. Perfect for horse lovers, the imaginative games are simple to learn, quick to play, and are fun for the whole family! The card game played with a standard 52 card deck has several different game variations that can be played by two to six players at a time. In this guide, we’re going to cover the basics of rummy, the variations of game types, the pros and cons of playing the game online, and some basic strategy to get you off in the right direction. The game is played by 3 to 8 players using multiple card decks. The game lasts for 7 rounds and each round varies from each other. Every player gets 10 cards for the first four rounds and 12 for the remaining rounds. Benefits of Playing Rummy Games on Junglee Rummy. Junglee Rummy is the best place to get started with rummy.
- Racehorse Rummy Card Game Rules And Instructions
- Racehorse Rummy Card Game
- Horse Race Rummy Card Game Rules
Description
From the Box:
'Five games to play with cards featuring favorite Breyer horses: No More Horses, Hold Your Horses, Color Rummy, Classic Rummy, Horse Memory.
Perfect for horse lovers, the imaginative games are simple to learn, quick to play, and are fun for the whole family! The oversized cards are easy for small hands to hold, and the sturdy box is perfect to fit into a suitcase or backpack when on the go.'
You get a deck of 48 cards that includes 4 color suits of 10 cards each with 1 wild card and 7 orange fact cards (that are not used in the games). The cards of each suit represent 10 different Breyer horse models. All of the cards are pretty heavily laminated.
The games are basically modifications of various public domain card games using their special deck and aimed at the younger crowd. The box does come with an exclusive Breyer Stablemate horse to encourage purchasing by completist collectors.
Includes 5 different games! Kids can have fun 'horsing around' with this neat Horse Play Card Game from Breyer®. From Palominos to Clydesdales, each one of these colorful collector's cards features a favorite horse. Choose between games of 'No More Horses!', 'Find the Horses', 'Color Rummy', 'Classic Rummy', and 'Horse Memory'. The oversize cards are easy for small hands to hold, and the sturdy box is perfect to fit into a suitcase or backpack when on the go. Includes 48 cards, game rules, and a special bonus limited edition Breyer collectible horse.
Enkortskille | |
Kille cards manufactured in 1897 in Stockholm by A Boman. From the collection of the Hallwyl Museum | |
Origin | Sweden |
---|---|
Type | Cuckoo group |
Players | 3 – 13 |
Cards | 42 cards |
Deck | Kille cards |
Playing time | 5 min/deal |
Related games | |
Chase the Ace, Coucou, Cuccú, Gnav, Hexenspiel, Ranter-Go-Round |
Kille (pronounced /ɕɪlːɛ/ or /kɪlːɛ/[a]), also called Cambio, Campio, Kambio or Kamfio,[1] is a game played with special playing cards, dating from a mediaeval French gambling game. In Sweden, the game had its heyday during the 1750s, but it is one of the oldest card games still played.[2]
History[edit]
The French gambling game of Coucou was invented in France around 1500 and spread across Central Europe. In the late 17th century, an Italian manufacturer produced a deck of cards adapted for the game. The game was named Cuccú after its highest card. Cuccú had 38 cards and two cards of each denomination (thus 19 unique denominations). Eleven of the cards in each suite were numeral cards, numbered 0-10. The other cards were picture cards, two of which – the Bucket and the Masque – ranked lower than the numerals. Five of the cards were ranked higher: the Inn, Cat, Horse, Guard, and Cuckoo (highest). The nineteenth card, the Harlequin, was outside the rankings and its value was determined by the game played and could vary in the same game.[2]
Cuccú spread north across Europe and became known in southern Germany, Austria and Switzerland by the names of Hexenspiel and Vogelkarten, which roughly means 'Witch game' and 'Bird cards'.[2]
The card game changed somewhat on its journey through Europe and was mentioned in Sweden as Campio for the first time in 1741 in a court record. Campio was a distortion of cambio or camfio, which was the name that began to be used in Sweden. The name Kille is first documented in 1833 (found in private correspondence from 1826) and was widely used from the 1850s. Kille is probably a corruption of Harlequin which was now the highest ranked card, but still had a special position in some games[2]
The card game's numeral and picture cards changed so that the pack consisted of 42 cards (again in pairs, so there were only 21 denominations). The number of numerals had increased to twelve and were numbered 1-12. There were three cards with lower values than the number cards; the Noll (Zero) numeral card became the Wreath, the Bucket became the Flowerpot and the Mask became the Fool, often depicted with a mask. The cards with higher values than the numerals were, in ascending order: the Inn, Cavalier, Pig, Hussar, Cuckoo and Harlequin.[2]
Culture[edit]
The game of Kille has left its mark on the Swedish language. For example, the phrases 'Svinhugg går igen' ('the pig bites back'), referring to a rudeness that rebounds on the performer, and 'gå värdshus förbi' ('go past the inn'), a lost opportunity, both come from the game of One-Card Kille.
Kille has also found its way into Swedish literature. Carl Michael Bellman's Fredman's Testament number 181, The Game of Cambio, is about a player's despair during a game:[3]
Hej, gutår, och kambio!
Granne, marsch ur potten!
Blaren, den hundsvotten —
Kambio . . . och kuku står.
Jag ser skorsten ryka:
Värdshus måste stryka...
Falstaff, fakir rhymed in an ABC for the letter P:[4]
Proletären gärna ville
dricka punsch och spela kille
Cards[edit]
A Kille pack consists of 42 cards. There are no suits in Kille, just two cards of each denomination. The denominations, from highest to lowest, are:
- Harlequin (Harlekin or Kille).[b][5][1]
- Cuckoo (Kuku, Kucku, Gök).[6]
- Hussar (Husar), also called the Master (Husse).
- Pig (Husu or Gris) or the Swine (Svin).
- Cavalier (Kavall).
- Inn or Tavern (Värdshus).
- Numerals, with a fleur-de-lys as their symbol in the denominations: 12, 11, 10...3, 2 ,1.
- Wreath (Kransen).
- Flowerpot (Blompottan or Blomkrukan) or Potty (Pottan).
- Fool (Blaren or Blarre).
Kille packs are still available. Two Swedish manufacturers, Öberg (Carta Mundi) and Offason, make them today. The images are in a sepia colour. A coloured pack was produced in 1975 but is no longer available.
One-Card Kille (Swap Kille)[edit]
One-Card Kille (Enkortskille), also Swap Kille (Byteskille), is the traditional game of chance played with Kille cards and may be played by 3 to 13 participants.
Dealer gives one card to each player. The objective is not to have the lowest ranking card after all players have had the opportunity to exchange cards. The one with the lowest card is knocked out, but there are other ways to be knocked out before the cards are finally exposed.
The turn to act is clockwise starting with the player to the left of the dealer. Players may exchange their card with the person sitting to their left, and in that case say 'switch' (byte) and push the card forward. If a player does not want no exchange cards, the player declares that he is 'satisfied' (nöjd) and slaps the table. With a few exceptions, the exchange is made with the cards face down. The exchange is not always carried out. If the player to the left has one of the cards below, he exposes the card and quotes a phrase:
- Cuckoo: If the player has a Cuckoo, the deal is over and everyone must reveal their cards. The person with the Cuckoo says 'No one swaps with the Cuckoo!', 'Cuckoo stands!' or 'The pigeon's taken off!'.
- Hussar: When exchanging with a Hussar, the cardholder answers 'the Hussar strikes'. The player who tries to make an exchange is knocked out, 'dead'.
- Pig: the holder of a Pig says 'the Pig bites back'. The attempted exchange is cancelled, but on top of that all previous exchanges are reversed until the Pig has returned to the player who received that card from the dealer. That player is then knocked out (but not the one who tried to make the exchange, unless that player was the one who was dealt the Pig).
- Cavalier and Inn: the holder of a Cavalier or Inn says 'pass the Cavalier' or 'pass the Inn' and the exchanger must bypass him and try to make an exchange with the next person.
Other rules:
- Exchanging with the stock. The dealer is the last one to act. If he wants to exchange, he must do so with the stock. Likewise a player who wanted to exchange with the dealer, but the dealer had the Cavalier or Inn, must exchange with the stock. If the Cavalier or Inn is drawn from the pack, it is not exchanged, but the player instead continues and draws the next card from the stock.
- Cards that are exposed during an exchange remain exposed for the remainder of the deal.
- Harlequins are exchanged face up. If a Harlequin is dealt or drawn from the pack, it is the highest card. If it is exchanged, it becomes the lowest card.
When there is a showdown, either because all players had the opportunity to make an exchange or because a player has encountered a Cuckoo, the player with the lowest card is out along with those who were knocked out for other reasons during the deal. It is possible to re-enter the game for another stake, but only three times: the first time for a single stake, the second time for half the pot, and the last time for a full pot.
When two players remain, the cards are re-dealt if one of them has received the Harlequin, and there is an immediate showdown if one of them has received the Cuckoo. A player who tries to exchange with the Pig or Hussar has immediately lost.[7]
Other games with Kille cards[edit]
- Femkortskille (knackkille)
(with the variants Auction Kille or Poker Kille) - Krypkille
(with the variants Sneaky Kille or Åland Kille)
Footnotes[edit]
- ^The pronunciations with 'k' is more common in southern Sweden.
- ^Although Kille can mean 'boy' or 'guy', it is not pronounced with a hard 'k', but a softer 'ch', so it may be a nickname for Harlequin.
Racehorse Rummy Card Game Rules And Instructions
References[edit]
- ^ ab'kille'. ne.se. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
- ^ abcdeInsert sheet in Killelek from Offason. Regler för Killespelet – Historik. Dan Glimne.
- ^Fredmans Testamente nummer 181, Kambiospelet. Carl Michael Bellman. Läst 2012-06-17
- ^Envar sin egen professor, på Artbin. Falstaff, fakir.
- ^'Kille'. Språktidningen. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
- ^'Kucku'. SAOB. Läst 2012-01-29.
- ^Insticksblad i Killelek från Offason. Regler för Killespelet. Ali Jerrimalm.
Bibliography[edit]
- Glimne, Dan (2016), Kortspelshandboken (3rd, expanded ed.), Stockholm: Känguru, pp. 405–426, ISBN978-91-7663-115-7
- Torgny, Ove (2003), Tio spel med spader kung, Stockholm: Bilda, pp. 90–100, ISBN91-574-7484-2
- Werner, Einar; Sandgren, Tore (1975), Kortoxen (9th, rev. ed.), Stockholm: Forum, pp. 103–111, ISBN91-37-05798-7
External links[edit]
Racehorse Rummy Card Game
- Kille - description and variant rules in English.