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Crazy Eights is a shedding-type card game for two to seven players and the best known American member of the Eights Group which also includes Pig and Spoons. The object of the game is to be the first player to discard all of their cards. The game is similar to Switch, Mau Mau or Whot!. [1]
Mao (or Mau [2]) is a card game of the shedding family. The aim is to get rid of all of the cards in hand without breaking certain unspoken rules which tend to vary by venue. The game is from a subset of the Stops family and is similar in structure to the card game Uno or Crazy Eights. [3]
Crazy Quilt (also known as Quilt, Indian Carpet or Japanese Rug) is a patience or solitaire card game using two decks of 52 playing cards each. [1] The game is so-called because the reserve resembles the weaves of a carpet or an arrangement of a quilt , with cards alternating vertical and horizontal rotations.
Play Crazy 8's, the fast-paced card game that inspired global sensation UNO, for free on Games.com.
Macau, also spelled Makaua or Macaua, is a shedding-type card game from Hungary, with similar rules to Crazy Eights or Uno and uses a standard 52 card deck. [1] The object of the game is to be the first player to remove all cards from one's hand. Macau involves bluffing so that the players can save cards for later for a higher point value ...
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Rummy is a group of games related by the feature of matching cards of the same rank or sequence and same suit. The basic goal in any form of rummy is to build melds which can be either sets (three or four of a kind of the same rank) or runs (three or more sequential cards of the same suit) and either be first to go out or to amass more points than the opposition.
Craits (sometimes spelled Crates or Creights) is a shedding card game for two to five players derived from Crazy Eights, which forms the origin of its name.Accounts of the game's origin are unclear, with some sources alleging it was created in the late 1960s in Chicago, Illinois [1] and others in the 1970s in Cambridge, Massachusetts.