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Euchre
Euchre is a trick-taking card game played in many parts of the world.
Geography/HistoryThe United States, the British Isles, Canada and Australia all have large followings of the game. In the United States, Euchre is generally regarded as a Midwestern game; though Euchre players can be found across the country, it is believed that the game is most predominant in the Midwest (particularly Indiana, Ohio, and Michigan) and a card player from that region is almost certainly expected to have heard of or played the game. Euchre is also popular in parts of Pennsylvania, because of its ties to the Pennsylvania Dutch.
SetupEuchre is a game that requires speed and decisiveness on the part of its players. It uses a deck of 24 playing cards, the cards from 2 to 8 being left out, although 32-card variants (with the sevens and eights included) are also played. There are four players, divided into two partnerships, with partners sitting at the table facing one another. Each player is dealt five cards; the remaining four cards (the kitty) are placed in the center on the table.
Euchre is a game of etiquette, and before the cards are dealt, the dealer offers the deck to be cut by the player to his right. Also, as in many card games, the order of deal is traditional, and expected to be followed. First, 3 (or 2) cards are dealt to each player, then 2(or 3) so that the total cards the player has received becomes 5.
In non-trump suits, the order is the normal Ace high-King-Queen-Jack-10-9 low, but in the trump suit, the highest card is the jack of trump, called the Right Bower. The name comes from the German word bauer, meaning peasant or pawn. This name is often used to refer to the jack of German games. The second highest (even higher than an ace of trump) is the jack in the suit of the same color, called the Left Bower. For all intents and purposes, the opposite jack is considered as if it were part of the actual suit. This is important later in the game, and is usually known by newcomers as the hardest part to learn about the game.
ProcedureAfter the deal, the top card is 'turned', or displayed face-up on top of the kitty. Starting with the dealer's left, this player decides whether they want to call the center card as trump, saying 'I order it up', or telling the dealer to 'take it up'. This player may also pass. The dealer's partner then may accept the trump by saying 'I assist', or passing. Next, the player to dealer's right may also 'order up', or pass. Finally, the choice comes back to the dealer, who may accept by saying 'I take it up', or passing.
"Ordering it up"If the center card is called trump, the dealer picks it up and discards another card from his hand, but he cannot choose the turn card he just received. This brings his hand back down to 5 cards. If all four players pass, each player is now given the opportunity to call another suit as trump in the same order, starting with the player at the dealer's left. If all four players pass on this second round, the hand is cancelled and a new one is dealt, moving the deal in a clockwise direction. This is called 'losing your deal'. There is a variation called 'stick the dealer', where if all players pass during the second round, the dealer is 'stuck', or 'screwed', and must choose the trump suit; there is no redealing. Another variation called 'club euchre', is whenever a club suit is turned, the dealer must play that suit as trump and make the bid.
GameplayThe game focuses on tricks. The lead starts with the player to dealer's left (or the dealer's partner if the player to dealer's right has decided to go alone), and this person plays the first card. All players must follow suit (yes, even the left bower if trump is lead, and it's the only trump a player has). After all four have played, the highest trump takes the trick, and receives the honor of leading the next. If no trump came out, the winner is the player with the highest card of the suit that was led.
Goal/ScoringThe goal is for the team who accepted the trump suit (the makers) to take three tricks out of a possible five. If they do so, the makers score one point, or two points if they take all five. If the opposing team (the defenders) take three or more of the tricks, they score two (this is called a euchre, or set). The first team to score ten points wins. Score is usually kept using a six and a four, using one card to cover up the other so that the correct number of pips are showing.
VariationsMany variations exist in this game:
- Some rules allow a player to "go alone" or "call loner" when calling trump; his partner sits out that hand, and if the lone player takes all five tricks, he gets four points, however, if he does not take all five, normal scoring applies. Needless to say, this should only be considered if a player is dealt a phenomenal hand, or the making team is in danger of losing.
- Some Euchre-players count 4 points to a side euchring a lone opponent, or if the full making team scores no tricks, the defenders may score the same number of points for a Super-Euchre.
- Some people allow a player to call "blind double loner" as a last-ditch effort before the maker even sees his cards; the turn card is automatically trump, and the game is played by normal loner rules, except 8 points are awarded if the maker wins all 5 tricks.
- Another variation common in the Midwestern US are the many "farmer's hand" rules, which are intended to allow a person who is dealt a poor hand to exchange his hand or call a re-deal. The most common criteria is the nines or nines-and-tens rule, which states that if a player is dealt three nine, or three tens, or any combination of the two, the first person to call "Farmer's hand!" may exchange the three cards with three in the kitty.
- Some areas play that multiple farmer's hands may be called during one hand, but the point is rather moot; after the first farmer's is called, the cards are guaranteed to be bad.
- Another variation is "screw the dealer". This is when no one orders-up the original card into the dealer's hand. If no other player decides to choose a trump suit during the second round, the dealer is forced to choose the trump suit.
Other variations of Euchre are widely played in the southwestern counties of England, where it is common for a pub to have its own team which takes part in competitive league matches with other teams. The most common form of the game played in the UK is one where a twenty-five card deck is used; the deck consists of A-K-Q-J-10-9, with an extra card called the Benny. This card, usually a joker card or the two of spades, is the highest trump no matter which suit is called. Should this card be the one turned over by the dealer, the dealer must decide which suit to call trumps before looking at their own hand. The bidding then continues as normal.
=External links=
- http://www.pagat.com/euchre/euchre.html
- http://games.yahoo.com/eu - Play online at Yahoo!
- http://play.pogo.com/rooms/roomtabs.jsp?game=euchre&sls=3&site=pogo - Pogo! Euchre
- http://home.cwru.edu/~mjs2/euchre.html - The Semi-Official Euchre Page, intended to be amusing, but still very a informative resource
- http://www.thegang1.com/Formats.html - Many alternative formats for a fun game
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License at http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html You may copy and modify it as long as the entire work (including additions) remains under this license. You must provide a link to http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html
To view or edit this article at Wikipedia go to http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euchre
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