SPADES The Ultimate Start Up: Rules, Strategies, and Tips for Winning

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  • Опубликовано: 10 июл 2024
  • Today we're going to play one of the greatest card games of all time: Spades. Spades is a trick-taking game played with four players in two teams of two. The object of Spades is to be the first team to reach a final score, usually 500 points. Points are won by accurately predicting the number of tricks you and your partner can win each round. The suit of spades is always the trump suit, giving the game its name. The strategic element, combined with the bidding process and the touch of team coordination, makes Spades one of the greatest card games of skill and strategy.
    Errors and Easter Eggs:
    Whoops made a mistake at 1:11… team on left should have a combined score of 7 not 6. Sorry, so sorry, sorry, my bad, really sorry about that friend, darn, what a mistake, sorry. All mistakes and errors are just Easter Eggs for super smart views to catch and note in the comments. This video has 28 Easter Eggs, find them all!
    Back to Spades:
    You'll need a standard 52-card deck and a pen and paper to keep score. Players sit around the table with partners sitting opposite each other. You will win or lose with your partner, so choose wisely. Communication with your partner about strategy is not allowed. Shuffle the deck and deal all the cards, giving each player 13 cards. Each player, starting with the player to the left of the dealer, bids the number of tricks they expect to win. Bids can range from zero (nil) to 13. Players' bids are added together, and this is the total number of tricks each team must win to score.
    The player to the dealer's left leads the first trick and can play any card except spades. Players must follow suit if they can. If they cannot, they may play any card, but not spades on the first trick. The player with the highest card in the lead suit wins the trick. Spades can be played on subsequent tricks if a player cannot follow suit. The player who wins the trick leads the next one.
    If a team meets or exceeds their bid, they score ten points for each trick they bid. If a team fails to meet their bid, they lose ten points for each trick they bid. If you have a terrible hand, you can bid nil. If successful, your team gets 100 points, but if you win just one trick, you score -100 points. The game continues until a team reaches 500 points. The team with the highest score at the end of the game wins.
    Other rules include penalties for not following suit and strategies for bidding and gameplay. Variations like Blind Nil and Ten for Two add more excitement. Spades is a culturally significant game that fosters community and competition. Now that you know how to play, gather some friends and enjoy!
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    By Christopher Cannucciari
    www.cannucciari.com
    www.dynmcrange.com
    All Rights: Dynamic Range
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Комментарии • 17

  • @NickFox-id7xr
    @NickFox-id7xr 24 дня назад +2

    My absolute favorite. Solid video.
    A couple things to know, especially if playing in the South:
    1) If one team wins all 13 tricks in one hand it’s called “going to Boston” and if this happens to you (unless your team was doing a double-nil) and you lose all 13 tricks, the game is over and you have to leave the planet. At the very least you can never play spades within a 500 mile radius of the people you lost to because everyone will know and you will have brought shame upon your family.
    2) if you accuse someone of not following suit (known as a renege), have receipts, because any Spades player worth their salt will deny a renege until the day they die (which is what I would have done if I’d ever been in that situation which I most certainly have not, your honor). This cannot be stressed enough. Doesn’t matter if you are right. They will make you point out which trick it was and tell from memory which cards were played. I threatened to call the U.N. When I got accused. (It worked….also I was right). So be prepared, because if you can prove your opponent reneged, you can hold that over them for life.
    3) house rules vary, so know it’s good to know modes like joker-joker-deuce-deuce, joker-joker-ace, and so on. Easy to look up.
    4) Spades is the greatest game in the universe.

    • @Play-In-Games
      @Play-In-Games  24 дня назад +1

      👆this! Great advice and house rules!

  • @WaxBadger
    @WaxBadger 24 дня назад +5

    Good explanation of the game, but one thing that wasn't brought up I noticed was the overtrick or "bag" penalty, where the additional points you take for every overtrick is to account for how many you have taken over your bids in each round and once you take your tenth overtrick the team loses 100 points at that moment. Usually as a reminder of this people playing this game will either count the overtricks separately from their score or use chips, but often times a score of 238 will suffice as the eight at the end warns the team that they got to bid as accurate as possible to not take more than one more overtrick.

    • @Play-In-Games
      @Play-In-Games  24 дня назад

      Great explanation of the overtrick penalty. I don’t play that way but probably should have mentioned it. Thanks for adding it here!

  • @saidsalim471
    @saidsalim471 23 дня назад +1

    Are you going to talk about how to play Contract Bridge next?

    • @Play-In-Games
      @Play-In-Games  23 дня назад

      It’s on my list but not for a little while. Stay tuned. Thanks for watching!

  • @D_H_M_
    @D_H_M_ 23 дня назад +1

    very good video, are you going to make more whist like card games videos?

    • @Play-In-Games
      @Play-In-Games  23 дня назад

      Perhaps, which do you think are best?

    • @NickFox-id7xr
      @NickFox-id7xr 22 дня назад

      @@Play-In-Games Bid Whist is incredible. Minnesota Whist is great too. And classic Whist is loaded with history.

    • @D_H_M_
      @D_H_M_ 21 день назад

      @@Play-In-Games I like very much normal whist and hearts, but i'd like to learn boston or bid whist

  • @verimation
    @verimation 22 дня назад +1

    nice video👍, also there is a similar game to this that we call it "HOKM"

    • @Play-In-Games
      @Play-In-Games  22 дня назад +1

      Very cool. Is that the Indian or Iranian version? I’ve been curious about learning more.

    • @verimation
      @verimation 22 дня назад

      @@Play-In-Games you nailed it, its an Iranian card game.

  • @kindadumbkindastrong4429
    @kindadumbkindastrong4429 21 день назад

    Learned to play this game in jail betting food on the outcome of games

    • @Play-In-Games
      @Play-In-Games  21 день назад

      That’s hard core! What influenced who you bet on the most and why?

  • @mohdameruddin7672
    @mohdameruddin7672 23 дня назад

    I played this game on phone, but I don't know how to precisely determine how much to bid. Ended up losing so many times >< and how to know if other players are cheating?

    • @Play-In-Games
      @Play-In-Games  23 дня назад +1

      Practice makes perfect but rule of thumb, bid one for any ace you have possibly one for kings, but not if it’s the only card of that suit. If you have a lot of spades consider a bid for every 2 you have. To find a cheater, look deep into their soul and if it is vacant, you’ll know what you’re dealing with. Thanks for watching.