Said it last video but I’ll say it again; this series is a great idea. Introduced Ricochet Poker to my group over the weekend and will get this one to the table soon too - thanks for digging through a mountain of card games to find a few gems to try out!
As a fan from HK I can say this is one of the most popular card games in HK and even China. People play it on their phones all the time. Happy to see this game get some recognition in the West. :)
ruclips.net/video/PouhpfTuYic/видео.html this is a good video showing how it's played. If you are playing with money u need to pay the winner according to the number of cards you have left. This is a staple for folks in HK especially during Chinese New Year :)
We have a similar game already in France called the President (or the assh*le) whuch uses almost the exact mechanic except for rockets and bomb. Also we do not really involve betting but the winner (the President) of the last round gets the best (or two best depending on the number of players) cards from the loser (the assh*le) of the last round. The loser of the last round always starts the next round
I love these videos. Almost entirely down to the pure spherical orb of positive energy Quinns takes during these. Despite the chaos of his guests, he shines radiantly with such joy. It's great.
I'm digging this new series. And I appreciate the gentle gambling warning, that seems like a good, social responsible thing to include. Love your work, folks.
So at the end of this series, are we getting a SU&SD deck of cards with a rulebook for all of these games? Or maybe just that Kirby deck, it's adorable!
Love it. This is my new favorite series. I’ve been playing ricochet poker with my kids for the past week and they love it. I’m excited to teach them this game. Thanks!
00:30 🃏 "Fight the Landlord" involves dealing cards among three players, reserving three cards face-down in the middle. 01:13 💰 Players bid to become the landlord in a gambling style; the landlord wins against all others or pays them. 02:51 🃏 The game revolves around shedding cards; first player to discard all cards wins as the landlord or the team wins if others do. 04:00 ♠ Gameplay involves players strategically discarding sets (e.g., pairs, triples) in a specific order. 05:49 🚀 "Rockets" and "bombs" are exceptional hands that can beat any set; rockets are the highest, doubling the bet when played. 07:26 💣 A "bomb" (four of a kind) beats any set, doubling the bet; the only thing to beat a bomb is a higher bomb or a rocket.
This seems like a 3-player variant of Big Two, one of the most common card games in China. (Also, Richard Garfield put out a really fun, simplified version of this with a modified deck to spice up the odds called The Great Dalmuti sometime in the late 90s.)
@@unrealed It's a little more complicated than The Great Dalmuti being based on Fight The Landlord. The two games have definite similarities and belong to the same general family, but TGD is closer to a game known as President or Asshole, where the outcome of one deal determines play order in the next, and there's no collaboration.
@@karlcorporan9064 Some westerners call Big Two "Chinese Poker," so you might actually be playing the same game. (Sidenote: this gets confusing, because there's a wholely different - and very, very fun - game called Chinese Poker where each player makes three poker hands from a starting hand of 13 cards.)
I loved this. Absolutely loved it. While I purchased games like Gloomhaven and Magic Maze on your recommendation, I could never convince say my parents to sit down and play because its all a bit too much for them. Most people know a deck of cards and a simple game like poker or euchre to enjoy. I feel like Fight the Landlord is a great game to be able to easily introduce and have everyone on board with relative ease. Looking forward to more of the series!
I don't know if these have already all been recorded, but I wanted to recommend another fantastic Card Game That Doesn't Suck. It's called Durak, and is apparently Russia's most popular card game. The way we always play it is a bit different from the rules explanation on Wikipedia (only the defender's immediate neighbors may attack, but they attack at the same time instead of passing on the opportunity to attack), but the gist is the same. It's great fun and not nearly as complicated as it looks on Wikipedia.
I love this series! I can finally introduce and explain games to people without having to lug around boxes or bags and promise "no no, you'll enjoy this!" Just need a deck of cards, some friends, maybe some libations, and we're good!
The pay dynamic also reminds me a bit of Pai-Gow Poker, where players have the option of being the "banker" when it's their turn come around. Great series so far, thanks!
This series is awesome! If you guys haven't heard of it, Euchre is my absolute favorite game you can play with a 52-card deck. It's relatively unknown outside of the Midwestern United States, but almost everybody who grew up with it treasures it with more devotion than I've ever seen for any other card game.
The game Clubs (by Northstar games) is a good introductory game to climbing games like this. Every clubs card is worth a certain amount of points at the end of the round, and there are some difficult decisions to make between going out early (first few players get bonus points at the end of the round) or taking your time to try and win the most tricks in which people had played clubs (point cards).
Thanks for this video! It would be especially interesting to hear some more about the history and relatives of these games, especially since card games generally come in clusters. As other commenters here have noted, this one has a lot in common with games like President and Tichu (a recent hit).
I grew up playing a similar game which we called warlords and scumbags. Same shedding game, but in the next round the last person to play all their cards had to donate their best card to the person who emptied their hand first. Catch is that if the warlord (the person who emptied their hand first in the previous round) doesn't win the next round they are automatically relegated to scumbag and need to give up their best cards to the new warlord. Makes for some great tension and bargaining
Very much enjoying this series. What's even more remarkable is that so far, neither of the games covered so far appear in David Parlett's Penguin Book of Card Games, the horrifically beat-up copy of which has been my go-to resource for unusual card games for years.
I played this recently with some friends, but decided to use standard US poker hands instead. Still ended up being a fine game with plenty of tension and scheming.
In certain parts of China's Shandong province they play this and a similar, but in my opinion better, game called Bao Huang. It's played with four decks (minus the 3, 4 and 5 cards) and five players - 2 vs 3. One of the red jokers and one of the black jokers are marked. The player that draws the marked red joker is the emperor and the others are farmers. The twist is while the emperor is known to all (because he leads the first hand), one of the farmers has drawn the marked black joker and is the 'Bao', who secretly supports the emperor. The Bao is known only to himself, the farmers don't know who it is and neither does the emperor. So much of the dynamic of the game is the social deduction hand by hand on who is or isn't 'hitting' the emperor. Playing as a farmer, emperor or Bao feels quite different. The Bao can pull off some really cleaver sleights of hand. It's always fun where in a game everyone is convinced player 3 is the bao and then player 5 leads his last hand with the marked joker - Especially if player 5 had convinced the farmers to use all their good cards to stop player 3 from winning. Even better are the games where you can't workout who is the Bao and then it turns out the emperor also drew the Bao card and has been 'hitting by himself'. Find someone who grew up playing this in Shandong and they will not want to play anything else. (Warning: Never play Bao Huang or Fight the Landlord with a Chinese Grandpa. They're wicked card counters.) (Another note: At least where I was in China they don't deal out the cards. They let the deck of cards fall sideways on the table and everyone takes turns drawing one card from the top. That allows all players to organize their hands as they're gaining their cards. That way you don't have to wait for the dealer to organize their hand after handing out the cards. Real useful when you're almost holding a whole deck in your hand)
Ah! I know a game with quite similar mechanics to this! It was taught to me by friends from Thailand. They call it slave or "slaf"(สลาฟ). But, that one isn't a betting game. In slave the first person out of cards becomes the king and the last person to still have cards becomes the slave. On the next hand, the slave has to pass their two best cards to the king before play begins.
Thumbs upped. Liked and subscribed. And I hear commenting helps. But really, my family always celebrates what new game we get to play together. I'm from a separated family who are quite different. Thank you for giving me a way to always bring something both families can come together with. That's special. That's Shut Up and Sit Down.
If you need a card game for a large group of people, our family often plays something called Devil. It can be played with 1 or 2 decks and the dealer doesn't change until the deck runs out. Everyone gets 3 tokens, meaning they're still active players. The dealer gives everyone with at least one token a card, then knocks on the table indicating players can touch their cards. If anyone touches their card before they lose a token. Once the dealer knocks, players can see their card. As are low, and Kings block trades. Starting from the player next to the dealer, they decide if they want to trade their card with the next player or pass. The player being traded to has to give their card to the player trading unless they have a King, at which point they turn it face up to block the trade. Once the first player completes their trade, the next player trades with the following, and so on until the last player trades with the dealer. At this point, the dealer can decide to trade with the top card of the deck by pulling it out face up. If it's a King the trade is blocked, if not, they keep the new card and discard the old one. Now, everyone turns their cards face up, and the person with the lowest card loses a token. When someone in the table loses all their tokens, they become a devil. This means they're not active in the game, but if anyone with a token pays attention to them, they have to give the devil a token and they come back into the game. Tokens must be always visible, devils are not corporeal, so they can't touch active players, can't manipulate cards or tokens, and your table has to decide what constitutes paying attention to the devil. I'd recommend verbally addressing the devil or doing an overt action that indicates they were responding to the devil (trying to pass them a glass, dealing them a card, etc). Devils are encouraged to try to get players attention. The game ends when only one player remains with tokens. It becomes hilarious madness the more devils you have, with people going from subtle attempts to ridiculous lengths to get players to respond to them.
2 quick rules we implemented are that, if someone accuses another player of paying attention to a devil, it's on them to convince the other active players of agreeing. If they don't, the accused player doesn't lose a token. Devils are still devils during the argument. The other rule is no getting mad.
Mate we called this 13 or big 2 in Australia when I used to play it in highschool like 10yrs ago... I always though we invented it and now I find out that people play it in England as well.
Adam Edwards I recommend Commune! It's a lot like Liar's Dice, if you're familiar with that. It's a bluffing game where you bid what the highest poker hand is among all dealt cards, but you only know your own. e.g. you have an 8, and that other person bid a pair of 8s, so do you bid three 8s? Or were they bluffing?
Skull isnt bad for that! Using 4 of a kind and say the spade as a skull, you can all hold your cards individually, and if the deck is one you dont care about and you have spares, you can burn your lost cards in the fire!
Blood, President, Scum, Tichu, each plays 2+, up to five per deck. Poker hands, plus double runs, with the qualification that runs require a minimum of three cards, not five. No betting required. Tichu is the best of these, a 4-player game with partners playing for points.
I’ve played this many times with my family of 3. There aren’t many card games that suit this player count, but Dou Di Zhu does so perfectly with a nice 2 against 1 dynamic. Another great card game for 3 is Skat (the German point-trick game) but requires some mental investment to learn the scoring/bidding complexity, but has that 2v1 idea. 3-player “500” is simpler also scratches that itch too.
Very similar to Red 10, another Chinese card game that folks in the family play often. Unlike bidding for the start position, teams are determined by who has the red 10s. This info is typically kept secret but can be revealed at the start for bonus points in the event of a win. Naturally someone can have both red 10s as well, so teams can be everyone one against one like this. Great video!
Great tutorial, but there are 2 small corrections: 1. the three cards left are supposed to be shown to everyone once the landlord has been chosen. 2. each time a bomb/rocket is played, the bid doubles (not just increment by the starting bid). so it would x4 starting bid upon the 2nd bomb, and x8 starting bid upon the 3rd.
The Quinns List has one thing over The Chuck Norris Lost... unlike The Chuck Norris List, The Quinns List has an item that Quinns defeated a landlord using Kirby.
You know we play this for fun but with a little money in China,most of us will chose to be the landlord if possible,because if you win the two farmers you can get money from both of them,most of us are very confident enough to win hahaha,it’s a easy game in China,anyone can play it.
Tichu is supposed to be based off of this. But it resembles Chimera much more, what with the bidding for the solo position, 3 players, and some of the possible hands (less of them in Tichu, and no rockets). Tichu also has the 4 special cards that spice it up quite a bit.
@@unrealed Are you sure about that? Duo Dizhou didn't originate until somewhere in the 1950s, and my impression of Zheng Fen is that it was around before then. I could be totally wrong though.
If you like this, get Tichu. Best cars games for 4 players. Pretty similar but you have two teams and always work together. Plus some fancy special cards. So good!
The only thing that troubles me about these games is the artificial gatekeeping. Making Ace high and then Deuce even higher doesn't change the game at all in its mechanics. All it does is make it harder to memorize for new players, giving vets an advantage.
I was about to comment that making Deuces higher than Aces makes absolutely no sense. It changes absolutely nothing mathematically speaking, just serves to confuse people
@@shutupandsitdown It could be if you talk about the symbols, like Hearts being higher than Clubs, but numbers? Why number them and then rearrange how numbers are counted? We have a popular card game in Brazil called Truco (you might even cover it later) that goes 4, 5, 6, 7, Q, J, K, A, 2, 3, at its most simple. When foreigners play, the rules are simple and fun, but they always lose because they were taught that numbers go upwards in ascending order. The game works the same with normal number ordering, but the people who are old hands at it benefit from the secret language. It's not an inclusive method, in my opinion.
I have a weekly card game night where we exclusively play games with a normal pack of cards. Whenever I learn a new game to play I remove roughly 30% of the rules that are artificial gate-keeping like this one. We are numbers people and don't care for "its fun" as a reason over mechanical depth and this sort of thing is super common.
Oh man I remember playing this back in highschool after my friends and I got bored of playing Big 2. Even better is when you play with two decks of cards and make it a 4 player game, things like bombs come up a lot more often but with the rule that points doubling only counts if it's 6 of a kind or more.
If you'd like to play a version of this game with no betting/gambling, check out "Chimera". It's played with a special deck, but if you are willing to mark up a regular deck, you can easily play with that.
Card Games that don't suck: Up and Down the River. Hot damn, natural arc, fun beginning and end game, closely balanced, and something to think about no matter what hand you are dealt. Top, top game.
There is a brilliant Finnish card game called shithead that I picked up awhile back. One of my favorite ways to kill a long trip, or for talking around a table. The best part is how much SKILL it involves...
This is a LOT like presidents and assholes, which is my favorite card game. This one adds betting and complicated plays. Presidents has a grossly unfair legacy thing that happens that makes for some really exciting come from behind wins but usually just the absurdity of the president punishing everyone.
Very cool game, best played at 3, that you can also play without gambling token. Only tedious thing is to have a deck with 2 distinct jokers (like do Bicycle for example) There is a lot of chinese CGTDS, like Da Bai Fen (Hundred), Tuo La Ji (Tractor), Zhao Pengyou (Looking for Friends), Zheng Fen, Jiăn Hóng Diăn, that all together inspired Tichu, the best of all trick-taking games.
For playing without token, you will need a paper and pen, and "bet" go from 3 to 5. First player to reach 30 win. Landlord take double of the bet if he wins.
OMG this is a western take on a game that I used to play with my friends all the time back in Middle/High school. We called it VC (Vietnamese Cards) but I think it has a bunch of different names since its popular in a bunch of different countries. I just know that one potential sequence you could play was a dragon, and another was a bomb.
If you like this game, please check out Ladder 29 from Green Couch Games. It's a shedding/ladder climbing card game (free for all) with similar rules for playing cards, though it is simpler than this, and involves playing with rules that are unique to each player (like can only lead with runs, or may not lead with singles, etc) that are "backdrafted" and based on the difficulty of that rule, will allow points to the player who goes out first, second, etc. Plays up to 5 and is great family fun. Cheers!
This card game is a combination of Big 2 (Dai Di) and Mahjong. It's very challenging, I could play it for 8 hours straight and I'm 40 years old (you have to play it with money so people will be serious about it, but it does not need big money, just make it small sum just to make it fun). It really takes a lot of brainpower as memorizing the cards that come out will increase your chance of winning. After I played it for 8 hours, my body really felt tired the next day.
My friends called this game Chinese Poker, no landlord. Instead, payouts were based on cards remaining in hand, paid to whoever emptied their hand first.
We played a game like this in High School, called it Vietnamese poker. Same rules but no real bidding and just kept going till one person was left with cards and that person had to leave (unless two people were waiting to get in, then it was the bottom two). Also sadly no bombs
Instead of having to bet with money, could you do it where you just get points? First to obtain a certain number of points win? Similar to the betting mechanic in a game like Pitch for example?
we play a similar game in Aus called presidents and assholes (same core mechanics but different starting hand rules [asshole has to give their best 2 cards to president, vice asshole has to give their best card to vice president] some seat shuffling is involved so the asshole is always last in clockwise formation and the president first, who leads). thanks will try this version out.
8:32 'If someone plays a bomb then a rocket the bet triples' - wouldn't it quadruple? Also, you said that rockets hardly ever happen. Since you're using the whole deck, I would have thought it would happen on average slightly less than once every n rounds, where n is the number of players.
I play that game but with a variation. Is a free for all but ranked and no bets. The first one to free his hand is the king, next is prince, neutral, slave, mega slave. or just King, neutral and slave if you play 3 friends. Right, the king has to give his lower card to the slave and backwards, the slave has to give his best one. Neutral remains the same. And, if we have king and prince, it'll be 2 for the king and 1 for the prince. The funny thing is that the game can finish whenever you want because and you can end up being king starting as a neutral or slave if you play wisely. Ranks can always change from one play to another.
Is there any purpose for ranking 2s as higher than Aces? From reading the rules, I get the impression that it would be simpler two rank 2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-J-Q-K-A-Jokers and change the sequence rules to disallow Aces and Jokers, instead of 2s and Jokers. I assume this has cultural or historical significance?
From the SUSD post: "Watching the video, you'll notice that "2s" are valued higher than royals. It's possible that this comes from the game's communist roots, in much that same way that following the French revolution, it was considered distasteful to play games where kings and queens were desirable. The more you know!"
@@rmsgrey it is related to the French Revolution (overthrowing the monarchy). Before, the king was the highest card, but after it was common/agreed that the people (represented by the 1) should be worth more than any king.
@@advoce Interesting. Doing some research on the matter turns up references to games being reported with Ace-high as far back as the early 1500s, so, while the French Revolution may well have encouraged the practice, it clearly wasn't the origin of it.
"Now, the landlord, if they WIN, everybody pays them. But if the LANDLORD wins, they have to pay everybody else."
Just like in the real world, landlords have sufficient resources to make the possibility of their loss seem inconceivable.
Said it last video but I’ll say it again; this series is a great idea. Introduced Ricochet Poker to my group over the weekend and will get this one to the table soon too - thanks for digging through a mountain of card games to find a few gems to try out!
I got confused and now I need to find a new flat. 1/10 would not fight my landlord again.
instructions unclear. My landlord is dead and I am about to be convicted.
As a fan from HK I can say this is one of the most popular card games in HK and even China. People play it on their phones all the time. Happy to see this game get some recognition in the West. :)
I learned this game from a friend after they returned from the Philippines. They were told it was called, "Chicky-chat"
ruclips.net/video/PouhpfTuYic/видео.html this is a good video showing how it's played.
If you are playing with money u need to pay the winner according to the number of cards you have left.
This is a staple for folks in HK especially during Chinese New Year :)
We have a similar game already in France called the President (or the assh*le) whuch uses almost the exact mechanic except for rockets and bomb. Also we do not really involve betting but the winner (the President) of the last round gets the best (or two best depending on the number of players) cards from the loser (the assh*le) of the last round. The loser of the last round always starts the next round
cho dai D?
Singapore too. Play this 90% of the time...
I love these videos. Almost entirely down to the pure spherical orb of positive energy Quinns takes during these. Despite the chaos of his guests, he shines radiantly with such joy. It's great.
I'm digging this new series. And I appreciate the gentle gambling warning, that seems like a good, social responsible thing to include.
Love your work, folks.
So at the end of this series, are we getting a SU&SD deck of cards with a rulebook for all of these games?
Or maybe just that Kirby deck, it's adorable!
Pleeeeeaaaaasssseeee
"I'm seizing the means of kicking your ass." needs to go on a t-shirt.
"We need socialism quite badly"
- Matt Lees, 2019
I think we'd do better with socialism quite _well._
I thought the way to beat the landlord was organizing a tenants union, but rockets and bombs sound promising too 🤩
why not both?
Unions? In a communists society? This madness leads only to jail!
Love it. This is my new favorite series. I’ve been playing ricochet poker with my kids for the past week and they love it. I’m excited to teach them this game.
Thanks!
I have a card game called 'Gang of Four' which is very similar. It uses a specialist pack, rather than a normal one.
Gang of Four, Fight the landlord, chimera, and tichu (personal favorite there) are all based on a Chinese game called "Big 2".
Agree except for Tichu, more influenced by Zheng Fen that Du Dizhou/Landlord
Absolutely love these videos.
the only thing i wish they had is a segment at the end of you all playing the game so we can actually see it play out.
00:30 🃏 "Fight the Landlord" involves dealing cards among three players, reserving three cards face-down in the middle.
01:13 💰 Players bid to become the landlord in a gambling style; the landlord wins against all others or pays them.
02:51 🃏 The game revolves around shedding cards; first player to discard all cards wins as the landlord or the team wins if others do.
04:00 ♠ Gameplay involves players strategically discarding sets (e.g., pairs, triples) in a specific order.
05:49 🚀 "Rockets" and "bombs" are exceptional hands that can beat any set; rockets are the highest, doubling the bet when played.
07:26 💣 A "bomb" (four of a kind) beats any set, doubling the bet; the only thing to beat a bomb is a higher bomb or a rocket.
This seems like a 3-player variant of Big Two, one of the most common card games in China. (Also, Richard Garfield put out a really fun, simplified version of this with a modified deck to spice up the odds called The Great Dalmuti sometime in the late 90s.)
1995 according to Wikipedia (publication of The Great Dalmuti).
oh, didn't know that The Great Dalmuti was based off Fight the Landlord OR that it was made by Richard Garfield! I'll have to check it out!
@@unrealed
It's a little more complicated than The Great Dalmuti being based on Fight The Landlord. The two games have definite similarities and belong to the same general family, but TGD is closer to a game known as President or Asshole, where the outcome of one deal determines play order in the next, and there's no collaboration.
I don't know Big Two, but we play a game we call Chinese Poker that is very similar too
@@karlcorporan9064 Some westerners call Big Two "Chinese Poker," so you might actually be playing the same game. (Sidenote: this gets confusing, because there's a wholely different - and very, very fun - game called Chinese Poker where each player makes three poker hands from a starting hand of 13 cards.)
I loved this. Absolutely loved it. While I purchased games like Gloomhaven and Magic Maze on your recommendation, I could never convince say my parents to sit down and play because its all a bit too much for them. Most people know a deck of cards and a simple game like poker or euchre to enjoy. I feel like Fight the Landlord is a great game to be able to easily introduce and have everyone on board with relative ease. Looking forward to more of the series!
I don't know if these have already all been recorded, but I wanted to recommend another fantastic Card Game That Doesn't Suck. It's called Durak, and is apparently Russia's most popular card game.
The way we always play it is a bit different from the rules explanation on Wikipedia (only the defender's immediate neighbors may attack, but they attack at the same time instead of passing on the opportunity to attack), but the gist is the same. It's great fun and not nearly as complicated as it looks on Wikipedia.
I love this series! I can finally introduce and explain games to people without having to lug around boxes or bags and promise "no no, you'll enjoy this!" Just need a deck of cards, some friends, maybe some libations, and we're good!
The pay dynamic also reminds me a bit of Pai-Gow Poker, where players have the option of being the "banker" when it's their turn come around. Great series so far, thanks!
This series is awesome! If you guys haven't heard of it, Euchre is my absolute favorite game you can play with a 52-card deck. It's relatively unknown outside of the Midwestern United States, but almost everybody who grew up with it treasures it with more devotion than I've ever seen for any other card game.
The game Clubs (by Northstar games) is a good introductory game to climbing games like this. Every clubs card is worth a certain amount of points at the end of the round, and there are some difficult decisions to make between going out early (first few players get bonus points at the end of the round) or taking your time to try and win the most tricks in which people had played clubs (point cards).
Thanks for this video! It would be especially interesting to hear some more about the history and relatives of these games, especially since card games generally come in clusters. As other commenters here have noted, this one has a lot in common with games like President and Tichu (a recent hit).
I grew up playing a similar game which we called warlords and scumbags. Same shedding game, but in the next round the last person to play all their cards had to donate their best card to the person who emptied their hand first. Catch is that if the warlord (the person who emptied their hand first in the previous round) doesn't win the next round they are automatically relegated to scumbag and need to give up their best cards to the new warlord. Makes for some great tension and bargaining
One of my favorite card games is a similar game - Gang of Four.
Very much enjoying this series. What's even more remarkable is that so far, neither of the games covered so far appear in David Parlett's Penguin Book of Card Games, the horrifically beat-up copy of which has been my go-to resource for unusual card games for years.
I'm so glad you're doing this. This is phenomenal.
More of these video please! Already have a deck of card with me for skull and roses and would love to have more games to break out in a pinch!
"I'm seizing the means of kicking your ass." - New Marx
Really loving this series, guys!
How did you get Emma Watson into this video?
They do look a lot alike...but I think he goes by Matt actually.
I was also distracted by the similarity
I am a big fan of this series. Please keep them coming!
I played this recently with some friends, but decided to use standard US poker hands instead. Still ended up being a fine game with plenty of tension and scheming.
In certain parts of China's Shandong province they play this and a similar, but in my opinion better, game called Bao Huang. It's played with four decks (minus the 3, 4 and 5 cards) and five players - 2 vs 3. One of the red jokers and one of the black jokers are marked. The player that draws the marked red joker is the emperor and the others are farmers. The twist is while the emperor is known to all (because he leads the first hand), one of the farmers has drawn the marked black joker and is the 'Bao', who secretly supports the emperor. The Bao is known only to himself, the farmers don't know who it is and neither does the emperor. So much of the dynamic of the game is the social deduction hand by hand on who is or isn't 'hitting' the emperor. Playing as a farmer, emperor or Bao feels quite different. The Bao can pull off some really cleaver sleights of hand. It's always fun where in a game everyone is convinced player 3 is the bao and then player 5 leads his last hand with the marked joker - Especially if player 5 had convinced the farmers to use all their good cards to stop player 3 from winning. Even better are the games where you can't workout who is the Bao and then it turns out the emperor also drew the Bao card and has been 'hitting by himself'. Find someone who grew up playing this in Shandong and they will not want to play anything else. (Warning: Never play Bao Huang or Fight the Landlord with a Chinese Grandpa. They're wicked card counters.) (Another note: At least where I was in China they don't deal out the cards. They let the deck of cards fall sideways on the table and everyone takes turns drawing one card from the top. That allows all players to organize their hands as they're gaining their cards. That way you don't have to wait for the dealer to organize their hand after handing out the cards. Real useful when you're almost holding a whole deck in your hand)
its interesting how many similar "find your team partner by deduction, teams designated by the cards dealt" there exist
Ah! I know a game with quite similar mechanics to this! It was taught to me by friends from Thailand. They call it slave or "slaf"(สลาฟ). But, that one isn't a betting game. In slave the first person out of cards becomes the king and the last person to still have cards becomes the slave. On the next hand, the slave has to pass their two best cards to the king before play begins.
Easy to understand. Good teach, Quinns!
Thumbs upped. Liked and subscribed. And I hear commenting helps. But really, my family always celebrates what new game we get to play together. I'm from a separated family who are quite different. Thank you for giving me a way to always bring something both families can come together with. That's special. That's Shut Up and Sit Down.
Ha! What a crazy game! We are DEFINITELY going to have to try this one out. Thanks for the vid!
"We need socialism quite badly!" - Mat Lees (2019)
If you need a card game for a large group of people, our family often plays something called Devil. It can be played with 1 or 2 decks and the dealer doesn't change until the deck runs out. Everyone gets 3 tokens, meaning they're still active players. The dealer gives everyone with at least one token a card, then knocks on the table indicating players can touch their cards. If anyone touches their card before they lose a token. Once the dealer knocks, players can see their card. As are low, and Kings block trades.
Starting from the player next to the dealer, they decide if they want to trade their card with the next player or pass. The player being traded to has to give their card to the player trading unless they have a King, at which point they turn it face up to block the trade. Once the first player completes their trade, the next player trades with the following, and so on until the last player trades with the dealer. At this point, the dealer can decide to trade with the top card of the deck by pulling it out face up. If it's a King the trade is blocked, if not, they keep the new card and discard the old one.
Now, everyone turns their cards face up, and the person with the lowest card loses a token.
When someone in the table loses all their tokens, they become a devil. This means they're not active in the game, but if anyone with a token pays attention to them, they have to give the devil a token and they come back into the game.
Tokens must be always visible, devils are not corporeal, so they can't touch active players, can't manipulate cards or tokens, and your table has to decide what constitutes paying attention to the devil. I'd recommend verbally addressing the devil or doing an overt action that indicates they were responding to the devil (trying to pass them a glass, dealing them a card, etc). Devils are encouraged to try to get players attention.
The game ends when only one player remains with tokens. It becomes hilarious madness the more devils you have, with people going from subtle attempts to ridiculous lengths to get players to respond to them.
2 quick rules we implemented are that, if someone accuses another player of paying attention to a devil, it's on them to convince the other active players of agreeing. If they don't, the accused player doesn't lose a token. Devils are still devils during the argument.
The other rule is no getting mad.
Mate we called this 13 or big 2 in Australia when I used to play it in highschool like 10yrs ago... I always though we invented it and now I find out that people play it in England as well.
What about card games to play around a campfire? I'd love to have a game that didn't require a table.
Adam Edwards I recommend Commune! It's a lot like Liar's Dice, if you're familiar with that. It's a bluffing game where you bid what the highest poker hand is among all dealt cards, but you only know your own. e.g. you have an 8, and that other person bid a pair of 8s, so do you bid three 8s? Or were they bluffing?
Skull isnt bad for that! Using 4 of a kind and say the spade as a skull, you can all hold your cards individually, and if the deck is one you dont care about and you have spares, you can burn your lost cards in the fire!
Blood, President, Scum, Tichu, each plays 2+, up to five per deck. Poker hands, plus double runs, with the qualification that runs require a minimum of three cards, not five. No betting required.
Tichu is the best of these, a 4-player game with partners playing for points.
I’ve played this many times with my family of 3. There aren’t many card games that suit this player count, but Dou Di Zhu does so perfectly with a nice 2 against 1 dynamic. Another great card game for 3 is Skat (the German point-trick game) but requires some mental investment to learn the scoring/bidding complexity, but has that 2v1 idea. 3-player “500” is simpler also scratches that itch too.
What happens when you only have one joker?
You have to play it as a single card. Or attach it to a triplet
Or attached to a quadplex. XD forgot that one
almost like the great dalmuti or presidents. Great series of videos ! keep them going !
Very similar to Red 10, another Chinese card game that folks in the family play often. Unlike bidding for the start position, teams are determined by who has the red 10s. This info is typically kept secret but can be revealed at the start for bonus points in the event of a win. Naturally someone can have both red 10s as well, so teams can be everyone one against one like this.
Great video!
Great tutorial, but there are 2 small corrections:
1. the three cards left are supposed to be shown to everyone once the landlord has been chosen.
2. each time a bomb/rocket is played, the bid doubles (not just increment by the starting bid). so it would x4 starting bid upon the 2nd bomb, and x8 starting bid upon the 3rd.
The Quinns List has one thing over The Chuck Norris Lost... unlike The Chuck Norris List, The Quinns List has an item that Quinns defeated a landlord using Kirby.
For the entirety of this video I thought there was another person (Bratt?) in the corner of the room, then I realised it was Quinn's reflection...
It's the ghost of Paul Dean.
You know we play this for fun but with a little money in China,most of us will chose to be the landlord if possible,because if you win the two farmers you can get money from both of them,most of us are very confident enough to win hahaha,it’s a easy game in China,anyone can play it.
You should try Chimera. It's the modern evolution of fight the landlord, with a touch of Tichu in it.
In my opinion, it's the better game.
This is very-very-very similar to Chimera.
Chimera's based off of this, which IS mentioned in the rules of its newer edition
Makes me feel like Mao.
sooo...Tichu for 3?
Tichu is supposed to be based off of this. But it resembles Chimera much more, what with the bidding for the solo position, 3 players, and some of the possible hands (less of them in Tichu, and no rockets). Tichu also has the 4 special cards that spice it up quite a bit.
@@unrealed Are you sure about that? Duo Dizhou didn't originate until somewhere in the 1950s, and my impression of Zheng Fen is that it was around before then. I could be totally wrong though.
Tichu for 3 = Chimera
If you like this, get Tichu. Best cars games for 4 players. Pretty similar but you have two teams and always work together. Plus some fancy special cards. So good!
Thanks for sharing! I’m gonna give this a shot.
The only thing that troubles me about these games is the artificial gatekeeping. Making Ace high and then Deuce even higher doesn't change the game at all in its mechanics. All it does is make it harder to memorize for new players, giving vets an advantage.
Just cultural differences, isn't it
I was about to comment that making Deuces higher than Aces makes absolutely no sense. It changes absolutely nothing mathematically speaking, just serves to confuse people
@@shutupandsitdown It could be if you talk about the symbols, like Hearts being higher than Clubs, but numbers? Why number them and then rearrange how numbers are counted?
We have a popular card game in Brazil called Truco (you might even cover it later) that goes 4, 5, 6, 7, Q, J, K, A, 2, 3, at its most simple. When foreigners play, the rules are simple and fun, but they always lose because they were taught that numbers go upwards in ascending order. The game works the same with normal number ordering, but the people who are old hands at it benefit from the secret language. It's not an inclusive method, in my opinion.
I have a weekly card game night where we exclusively play games with a normal pack of cards. Whenever I learn a new game to play I remove roughly 30% of the rules that are artificial gate-keeping like this one. We are numbers people and don't care for "its fun" as a reason over mechanical depth and this sort of thing is super common.
@@xicufwm I think making Aces (1) higher than the face cards also makes no sense. Right?
This feels like a video I'd ask for if I did those things.
Oh man I remember playing this back in highschool after my friends and I got bored of playing Big 2.
Even better is when you play with two decks of cards and make it a 4 player game, things like bombs come up a lot more often but with the rule that points doubling only counts if it's 6 of a kind or more.
Loving this series.
I've been keen to learn this game for ages to prove that I am the most serious revolutionary ever -- thanks comrades!
If you'd like to play a version of this game with no betting/gambling, check out "Chimera". It's played with a special deck, but if you are willing to mark up a regular deck, you can easily play with that.
Card Games that don't suck: Up and Down the River. Hot damn, natural arc, fun beginning and end game, closely balanced, and something to think about no matter what hand you are dealt. Top, top game.
There is a brilliant Finnish card game called shithead that I picked up awhile back. One of my favorite ways to kill a long trip, or for talking around a table. The best part is how much SKILL it involves...
There is so many things you can do with a deck of cards! This is great variant :)
This is a LOT like presidents and assholes, which is my favorite card game.
This one adds betting and complicated plays.
Presidents has a grossly unfair legacy thing that happens that makes for some really exciting come from behind wins but usually just the absurdity of the president punishing everyone.
6:03 - The collective action of the working class?
"Rockets and bombs!" :c
8:08 c:
When the landlord was chosen, that person was supposed to reveal the 3 cards on the table to everyone.
We need to see Bridge in this series!
Very cool game, best played at 3, that you can also play without gambling token. Only tedious thing is to have a deck with 2 distinct jokers (like do Bicycle for example)
There is a lot of chinese CGTDS, like Da Bai Fen (Hundred), Tuo La Ji (Tractor), Zhao Pengyou (Looking for Friends), Zheng Fen, Jiăn Hóng Diăn, that all together inspired Tichu, the best of all trick-taking games.
For playing without token, you will need a paper and pen, and "bet" go from 3 to 5. First player to reach 30 win. Landlord take double of the bet if he wins.
... and others score all the same of the bet if they win (so, 3,4 of 5 each).
Losers score 0 (they don't loose points)
OMG this is a western take on a game that I used to play with my friends all the time back in Middle/High school. We called it VC (Vietnamese Cards) but I think it has a bunch of different names since its popular in a bunch of different countries. I just know that one potential sequence you could play was a dragon, and another was a bomb.
1:14 if the landlord wins only they score and if the team wins both of them score
I used to play Big Two/Presidents all the time in high school and uni. Good fun.
If you like this game, please check out Ladder 29 from Green Couch Games. It's a shedding/ladder climbing card game (free for all) with similar rules for playing cards, though it is simpler than this, and involves playing with rules that are unique to each player (like can only lead with runs, or may not lead with singles, etc) that are "backdrafted" and based on the difficulty of that rule, will allow points to the player who goes out first, second, etc. Plays up to 5 and is great family fun. Cheers!
MORE PLEASE! YOU GUYS ROCK!
Great series! Keep it up!
The landlord, if they win everybody pays them. BUT if the landlord wins then they have to pay everybody else. 1:10
Wow, Quinns found 3 beers for his good friends. Also, nice to see Annie again!
This card game is a combination of Big 2 (Dai Di) and Mahjong. It's very challenging, I could play it for 8 hours straight and I'm 40 years old (you have to play it with money so people will be serious about it, but it does not need big money, just make it small sum just to make it fun). It really takes a lot of brainpower as memorizing the cards that come out will increase your chance of winning. After I played it for 8 hours, my body really felt tired the next day.
First time hearing of this game while reading ‘Release that Witch’. Came to have a look and am pleasantly surprised.
Can't use Twos or Jokers in any of the runs, except as kickers, so JQKA2 at 4:16 incorrect.
I want to see you guys actually play a series of these games!
My friends called this game Chinese Poker, no landlord. Instead, payouts were based on cards remaining in hand, paid to whoever emptied their hand first.
There's a lot of 1 VS 2 games like this and they're all great. Chimera is my favorite non-gambling version. Still has bidding though.
more card games that does not suck please pleaseeeeeee
You guys make me happy
We played a game like this in High School, called it Vietnamese poker. Same rules but no real bidding and just kept going till one person was left with cards and that person had to leave (unless two people were waiting to get in, then it was the bottom two). Also sadly no bombs
Instructions unclear. Now own my apartment complex.
love this new series.
I really love this series
This looks like a blast!
Instead of having to bet with money, could you do it where you just get points? First to obtain a certain number of points win? Similar to the betting mechanic in a game like Pitch for example?
Instructions unclear, I accidentally summoned my Blue Eyes White Dragon
Not a fan of card games normally but this one looks great - thanks.
we play a similar game in Aus called presidents and assholes (same core mechanics but different starting hand rules [asshole has to give their best 2 cards to president, vice asshole has to give their best card to vice president] some seat shuffling is involved so the asshole is always last in clockwise formation and the president first, who leads).
thanks will try this version out.
8:32 'If someone plays a bomb then a rocket the bet triples' - wouldn't it quadruple?
Also, you said that rockets hardly ever happen. Since you're using the whole deck, I would have thought it would happen on average slightly less than once every n rounds, where n is the number of players.
I play that game but with a variation. Is a free for all but ranked and no bets. The first one to free his hand is the king, next is prince, neutral, slave, mega slave. or just King, neutral and slave if you play 3 friends. Right, the king has to give his lower card to the slave and backwards, the slave has to give his best one. Neutral remains the same. And, if we have king and prince, it'll be 2 for the king and 1 for the prince. The funny thing is that the game can finish whenever you want because and you can end up being king starting as a neutral or slave if you play wisely. Ranks can always change from one play to another.
Is very popular in Spain and we call it "Culo", like Ass. Dont' know why...
What is the rule regarding if you only had 1 joker in you hand, unable to play "rockets"?
That Kirby deck is great!
but what happens if you cannot make any of the hands? if i have an 8 of hearts and a 3 of diamonds left, how do i start a new round?
Checked the rules, you can play a single card. im a doofus
Is there any purpose for ranking 2s as higher than Aces?
From reading the rules, I get the impression that it would be simpler two rank 2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-J-Q-K-A-Jokers and change the sequence rules to disallow Aces and Jokers, instead of 2s and Jokers.
I assume this has cultural or historical significance?
Is there any reason for Aces to rank higher than Kings rather than being 1s?
From the SUSD post: "Watching the video, you'll notice that "2s" are valued higher than royals. It's possible that this comes from the game's communist roots, in much that same way that following the French revolution, it was considered distasteful to play games where kings and queens were desirable. The more you know!"
The reason is, in most rules, 2s are not allowed in sequences. So the highest sequence is 10 J Q K A.
@@rmsgrey it is related to the French Revolution (overthrowing the monarchy). Before, the king was the highest card, but after it was common/agreed that the people (represented by the 1) should be worth more than any king.
@@advoce
Interesting. Doing some research on the matter turns up references to games being reported with Ace-high as far back as the early 1500s, so, while the French Revolution may well have encouraged the practice, it clearly wasn't the origin of it.