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  2. French Tarot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Tarot

    The game of French Tarot is a trick-taking strategy tarot card game played by three to five players using a traditional 78-card tarot deck. The game is played in France and also in French-speaking Canada. It should not be confused with French tarot, which refers to all aspects of cartomancy and games using tarot cards in France.

  3. Bourgeois Tarot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bourgeois_Tarot

    The Fournier type of Tarot Nouveau deck, like most (but not all) tarot decks, is composed of 78 cards. 56 are suited in the traditional French suits, with 14 cards per suit; ten "pip" cards with values 1 to 10 (the ace bears the number 1 instead of the familiar "A" and usually ranks low) and four court cards: jack (valet), knight or cavalier ...

  4. Tarot card games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarot_card_games

    A complete Tarot deck such as one for French Tarot contains the full 78-card complement. It can be used to play any game in the family, with the exception of Minchiate, an extinct game that used 97 cards. Austrian-Hungarian Tarock and Italian Tarocco decks are a smaller subset, of 63, 54, 40, or even 36 cards, suitable only for games of a ...

  5. Tarot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarot

    French-suited tarot decks are known as the oldest decks used for the Tarot. With the exception of novelty decks, French-suited tarot cards are almost exclusively used for card games. The earliest French-suited tarot decks were made by the de Poilly family of engravers, beginning with a Minchiate deck by François de Poilly in the late

  6. List of traditional card and tile packs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_traditional_card...

    The 78-card Tarot Nouveau deck is the most widely used set for Tarot card games in France, Belgium, Denmark, and parts of Switzerland. A full set contains the standard 52 cards plus a Knight face card for each suit ranking between the queen and jack. Aces are marked with "1" and are the lowest ranked cards.

  7. Cartes de Suisses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartes_de_Suisses

    Le Fou (The Fool) from a Cartes de Suisse pack. The “Cartes de Suisses” is a name sometimes given to an 18th-century standard pattern of Tarot playing cards that were initially produced in Rouen, and later in the Austrian Netherlands as well as in the Prince-Bishopric of Liège, [1] now both part of Belgium.

  8. Scarto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scarto

    The 78-card Italian suited Tarocco Piemontese is used to play this game but the French suited Tarot Nouveau deck can be a substitute. The deck should contain 56 cards divided into four suits each with ten ranks of pip cards and four ranks of face cards plus a suit of 21 trumps and one suitless card, the Fool.

  9. Template:Card/doc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Card/doc

    This is a documentation subpage for Template:Card. It may contain usage information, categories and other content that is not part of the original template page. This template displays a playing card of a given suit and value.