Read The Penguin Book of Card Games: Everything You Need to Know to Play Over 250 Games Online
Authors: David Parlett
bid ‘against’ with that on the right (X = Excuse):
† 21 17 16 14 12 11 5 4 X † 21 19 18 16 14 10 9 8 l X
K C J T 4 2
Q 2
J 3
K 6
7
K Q 3
none
K
The interest of the play rests as much on the outcome of petit, the
lowest trump, as on the main contract, since it both counts as a bout
and carries weight in the last trick. If you hold it, decide from the
outset whether or not to save it for the last trick. As soloist, try to
ensure its safety by leading trumps whenever possible so as to draw
them al and leave the lowest safe.
French Tarot for three
The same, but with these variations. Deal twenty-four cards to each
player in batches of four, and six to the dog. The lowest declarable
player in batches of four, and six to the dog. The lowest declarable
bunch is Thirteen (score 10), the highest Twenty-one (score 40). A
lit le slam is 22 or 23 tricks. If an odd card remains after counting
in pairs, ignore it.
Tapp Tarock
3 players, 54 cards (Austrian tarocks)
Tapp, or Tappen, makes a good introduction to the general
principles of Tarot play as it developed in central Europe, and can
lead to more advanced 54-card, French-suited games such as Point
Tarock and Konigsrufen. The fol owing is based on Babsch, Original
Tarock (Vienna, 1975), but details vary from place to place. The
French origin of Austro-German Tarock games is revealed in their
terminology. Skus comes from excuse; Mond, though meaning
moon, is a corruption of monde (‘world’); pagat, the smal est
trump, is related to bagatel e; and trul is a corruption of tous les
trois.
Cards The Austrian Tarock pack contains 22 trumps (‘tarocks’) and
32 plain cards.
The highest tarock, cal ed Skus, depicts a Fool or Joker
The second highest, cal ed Mond, is numbered XXI
Others fol ow in descending order: XX, XIX, XVI I…
The lowest, cal ed Pagat, is numbered I.
Skus, Mond and Pagat form a trio cal ed the trul . In plain suits,
cards rank downwards as fol ows:
In and
King Queen Cavalier Jack T 9 8 7
In and King Queen Cavalier Jack A 2 3 4
Deal Whoever cuts the highest card deals first (trumps beat plain
suits). The deal and turn to play then pass regularly to the right.
suits). The deal and turn to play then pass regularly to the right.
Deal a talon of six cards face down to the table in threes, the second
batch lying crosswise atop the first, then sixteen cards to each
player in eights. Anyone dealt no tarocks at al may cal for a new
deal.
Object There is an auction to decide who plays alone against the
other two. The soloist’s primary aim is to win cards total ing at
least 36 of the 70 points available. For this purpose, cards won in
tricks count as fol ows:
Skus, Mond, Pagat 5 each
King
5 each
Queen
4 each
Cavalier
3 each
Jack
2 each
All others
1 each
This gives a theoretical total of 106. However, won cards are
counted in threes, and each batch of three counts 2 less than its face
value. As there are 18 batches (54 -f- 3), the final total is 70 (106 –
36). Thus the target of 36 points represents just one point more
than half the total.
Make a mental note if you hold two or three cards of the trul , or
al four Kings, as these earn a bonus at end of play.
Types of bid There are basical y only two bids: Exchange and Solo.
In an exchange game, the soloist turns up the six cards of the
talon, adds either the top three or the bot om three to his
hand, and discards three cards face down in their place. These
three discards wil count for him at end of play as if he had
won them in tricks, while the other three, which are turned
face down again, wil similarly count for the opponents.
In a Solo, he leaves the six cards of the talon unturned, and al
In a Solo, he leaves the six cards of the talon unturned, and al
six wil count for the opponents at end of play as if they had
won them in tricks.
Bidding procedure Although there are only two basic bids,
‘Exchange’ can be bid at three dif erent levels, namely Dreier
(‘threes’) for a score of 3, Unterer (‘lowers’) for 4, and Oberer
(‘uppers’) for 5 points. (These terms original y denoted which of
the two batches of three cards, lower or upper, the Soloist had to
take. Nowadays the choice is free.)
Each in turn, starting with eldest, may pass or bid. A player who
has once passed may not come in again. So long as no one has yet
bid Solo, the procedure is as fol ows.
The first bid (if not Solo) must be Dreier. This can be overcal ed
only by Unterer (or Solo), and Unterer only by Oberer (or Solo).
However, if a player who comes earlier in the bidding order has
made a bid and been overcal ed, and has not yet passed, he may
raise his bid to that of the previous player by saying ‘Hold’, thereby
exerting positional priority.
Anyone may bid Solo in their proper turn, and this normal y ends
the auction, as it cannot be overcal ed. (Theoretical y, an earlier
player can ‘hold’ the solo bid of a later one; but it is most unlikely
that two players would hold cards strong enough to contest it.)
Announcements Unless the highest bidder is playing Solo, he now
turns up the six cards of the talon, takes either the top three or the
bot om three, and makes three discards face down in their place.
These may not include a King, or a card of the trul . They may
include other tarocks only if he has no other legal discard(s), and in
this case he must show his opponents which tarocks he has
discarded. Before a card is led, any of the fol owing announcements
may be made:
The soloist may announce ‘Pagat’, thereby undertaking to win
the last trick with the lowest trump (I). If he is forced to play
it to an earlier trick, he loses this bid. He may not play it
it to an earlier trick, he loses this bid. He may not play it
earlier voluntarily, if he can legal y avoid it, even though he
may wish to do so in order to save his basic contract.
The soloist may announce ‘Valat’, thereby undertaking to win
every trick. (Very rare!)
Either opponent may announce ‘double the game’, ‘double the
Pagat’, ‘double the Valat’ (as the case may be), if he believes
the soloist wil not fulfil his contract or achieve whatever feat
he announced. In return, the soloist may announce ‘redouble’
to anything that was doubled. These announcements
respectively double and quadruple whatever scoring feature
the soloist wins or loses.
Play Eldest leads to the first trick, and the winner of each trick leads
to the next. Players must fol ow suit if possible, otherwise must
play a tarock if possible, otherwise may play any card. The trick is
taken by the highest card of the suit led, or by the highest tarock if
any are played, and the winner of each trick leads to the next.
Tricks need not be separated, and al cards won by the two partners
are thrown face down to a single pile.
Score Each side counts the card-points it has won as described
above. If the soloist has reached his 36-point target he scores the
appropriate game value, or is paid it by each opponent. If not, each
opponent scores the appropriate game value or receives it from the
soloist. The basic game values are: Threes = 3, Lowers = 4,
Uppers = 5, Solo = 8. These amountsare
doubledorquadrupledifthegame was respectively doubled or
redoubled.
If the soloist wins every trick, he scores the above amount
fourfold, or eightfold if he previously announced ‘Valat’. But if he
announced Valat and failed to win every trick, he loses the above
amount eightfold, regardless of how many card-points he took. This
amount is doubled or quadrupled if the announcement was
respectively doubled or redoubled.
If the soloist wins the last trick with Pagat, he scores 4 points, or
If the soloist wins the last trick with Pagat, he scores 4 points, or
8 in a solo bid. Conversely, if he leads Pagat to the last trick and
loses it – or, having announced it, plays it to any earlier trick – he is
deemed to have been at empting to make the bonus, and the
appropriate 4 points (8 in a solo) are scored by each opponent.
These amounts are doubled, won or lost, if he previously
announced his intention of winning the last trick with Pagat, and
further doubled or quadrupled if the announcement was