Thursday, February 09, 2012

How to Play Spades : Basic Rules of Spades


Learn about the basic rules of spades in this free card playing video. Expert: Joe Andrews Contact: www.grab.com Bio: Joe Andrews has been playing cards for more than 30 years, and he is the author of five card game books. Filmmaker: Christian Munoz-Donoso

How to play Spades Card Game, Learn Spades Rules and many other Party Games

 

Spades Rules is a very popular four player card game. Here’s how to play: The four players are in fixed partnerships, with partners sitting opposite each other. Deal and play are clockwise. A standard pack of 52 cards is used. The cards, in each suit, rank from highest to lowest: A, K, Q, J, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2. The first dealer of the game is chosen at random, and the turn to deal rotates clockwise. The cards are shuffled and then dealt singly, in clockwise order beginning with the player on dealer’s left, until all 52 cards have been dealt and everyone has 13.

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The bidding begins with the player to dealer’s left and continues clockwise around the table. Everyone must bid a number, and in theory any number from 0 to 13 is allowed. Unlike other games with bidding, pass. There is no second round of bidding – bids once made cannot be altered. Example: South deals; West bids 3; North bids 1; East bids 4; South bids 4. The objective of North and South is to win at least 5 ticks (4+1), East and West try to win at least 7 (4+3).


A bid of 0 tricks is known as Nil. This is a declaration that the player who bid Nil will not win any tricks during the play. There is an extra bonus for this if it succeeds and a penalty if it fails. The partnership also has the objective of winning the number of tricks bid by the Nil’s partner. It is not possible to bid no tricks without bidding a Nil. If you don’t want to go for the Nil bonus or penalty you must bid at least.


Some players allow a bid of Blind nil. This is a nil bid declared before a player looks at his cards. The bidder may exchange two cards with partner – the bidder discards two cards face down; partner picks them up and gives back two cards face-down in return. It is usually agreed that Blind Nil may only be bid by a player whose side is losing by at least 100 points.


The player to dealer’s left leads any card except a spade to the first trick. Each player, in turn, clockwise, must follow suit if able; if unable to follow suit, the player may play any card.


A trick containing a spade is won by the highest spade played; if no spade is played, the trick is won by the highest card of the suit led. The winner of each trick leads to the next. Spades may not be led until either some player has played a spade (on the lead of another suit, of course), or the leader has nothing but spades left in hand.


Playing the first spade is known as “breaking” spades. A side that takes at least as many tricks as its bid calls for receives a score equal to 10 times its bid. Additional tricks (over tricks) are worth an extra one point each.


Sandbagging rule: Over tricks are colloquially known as bags. A side which (over several deals) accumulates ten or more bags has 100 points deducted from its score. Any bags beyond ten are carried over to the next cycle of ten over tricks – that is if they reached twenty over tricks they would lose another 100 points and so on. (Note: it is not necessary to keep track of over tricks separately as the cumulative number of over tricks taken appears as the final digit of the team’s score, if positive). Example: Suppose a team whose score is 337 bids 5 tricks. If they win 7 tricks they score 52, taking their score to 389. If they win 8 tricks they score 53, but lose 100 because they now have 10 bags, and their score becomes 290 (337 + 53 – 100). If they win 9 tricks they score 54 and lose 100, bringing their score to 291. If a side does not make its bid, they lose 10 points for each trick they bid.


If a bid of nil is successful, the nil bidder’s side receives 100 points. This is in addition to the score won (or lost) by the partner of the nil bidder for tricks made. If a bid of nil fails – that is, the bidder takes at least one trick – the bidder’s side loses 100 points, but still receives any amount scored for the partner’s bid.


The usual rule is that when a nil fails, the tricks won by the nil bidder do not count towards making the partner’s bid, but do count as bags for the team. A bid of blind nil scores twice as much as an ordinary nil – it wins 200 points if successful and loses 200 points if it fails. The side which reaches 500 points first wins the game. If both sides reach 500 points in a single deal, the side with the higher score wins. 

 

How to play Spades 1


This is Part 1 of a 3 video series on how to play the card game Spades. It is a very skilled game and the software that it’s played on in the video is the first and only online Spades software.

Poker: Free Poker is for Everyone

Poker is not a free game that you can just play anytime since you need seed money to be able to get a seat at the table and play. What free poker connotates is that you can get to play with the best and the worst of them anytime since this is usually played over on the internet. It becomes “free” because several websites offer poker games to internet poker game players for free. Just sign up and get to play free poker already.

Therefore, free poker is the online poker for most players. How does this differ from the other pokers being played everywhere else? One factor is that in free poker, you don’t know who your opponents are. You won’t be able to read their eyes or anticipate their body movements since this is being played virtually. Of course, if you cannot see them, they can not also see you. Thus, there is more freedom to react. Another feature of free poker in the internet setting is that rules are more strict since nobody is seeing anybody, the objectivity of the dealer or dealer/player is more or less not compromised that much.

Same betting rules for free poker and the other variants of the poker game exists. Just make sure that before you go play free poker, you are very aware of these rules. To give you tips on how to play free poker, never forget that five of a kind is the highest hand you can have, when the use of wildcard is part of the rules of the free poker (such as five aces, fifth card is a wildcard). If not, then the royal flush (where you have cards of the same suit that go from ten, jack, queen, king, and ace) is the hand to beat. Next best thing is the straight flush where you hold five cards of consecutive value (such as two, three, four, five, six of spades) that only have one suit.

The following are the various hands you can make in free poker according to their ranking. These are the four of a kind, full house, a flush, straight, three of a kind, two pair, one pair, and high card. Four of a kind is when you have the one value card of the different suits, such as the ace of hearts, diamonds, spades, and clubs. A full house is when you are holding three suit cards of one value and a pair, such as the king of spades, hearts and diamonds plus six of hearts and diamonds. Flushes is the card hand when you have five cards of the same suit at no particular order, such as two of hearts, six of hearts, ace of hearts, nine of hearts and king of hearts. You can also have a regular straight when you have different suits that form a consecutive ranking of the cards (such as seven of clubs, eight of spades, nine of diamonds, ten of diamonds, and jack of hearts).

Three of a kind is when you don’t have any pair to make it a full house, while two pair is having two sets of pair in a hand, such as holding jack of diamonds and clubs, and another pair of two of hearts and two of diamonds. One pair is when you only have one set of a pair. And lastly, the lowest hand is when you only have high cards such as the ace, the king, the queen. This hand does not form any of the better hands thus its lowly level. As in any variant of poker, the thing to remember in free poker is that the degree of difficulty in forming the hands determine the value it has in the chain.

Are we ready to play free poker now? You bet!



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