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  2. Klaverjas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaverjas

    Klaverjas (Dutch: [ˌklaːvərˈjɑs] ⓘ) or Klaverjassen (Dutch: [ˌklaːvərˈjɑsə(n)] ⓘ) is a Dutch four-player trick-taking card game that uses a Piquet pack of 32 playing cards. It is closely related to the game of Klaberjass (also known as Bela) and is one of the most popular card games in the Netherlands, traditionally played in ...

  3. Play Whist Online for Free - AOL.com

    www.aol.com/games/play/masque-publishing/whist

    Play the classic trick-taking card game. Lead with your strongest suit and work with your partner to get 2 points per hand. Play Whist Online for Free - AOL.com

  4. Whist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whist

    The auction whist group is a family of games with the characteristics of whist – an auction for the right to choose trumps won by the highest contract or largest number of tricks – and fixed partnerships. [14] Bid whist – a partnership game with bidding, popular among African Americans in the United States. [15]

  5. List of trick-taking games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_trick-taking_games

    The following games are played with German-suited packs of 32, 33 or 36 cards. Some are played with shortened packs e.g. Schnapsen. German-suited packs are common, not just in Germany, but in Austria and Eastern Europe.

  6. Colour whist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colour_whist

    Colour whist (whist à la couleur or whist belge in French or Kleurenwiezen in Dutch) is a Belgian variation to the card game whist. In contrast to the normal game of whist, the trump colour is determined by a bidding process rather than being the last card on the stack. The trump is determined during a first phase in the game. A player "asks ...

  7. Solo whist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solo_whist

    The game was introduced to London in 1852 by a family of Dutch Jews. It quickly became popular in London's Jewish Community and was known as Solo Whist. In the early 1870s Solo Whist was played as a low stakes gambling game in London's sporting clubs as a replacement for more complex and slower games like Whist. [2]

  8. Dutch Blitz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_Blitz

    Dutch Blitz is a fast-paced, family oriented, action card game played with a specially printed deck. The game was created circa 1937 [ citation needed ] by Werner Ernst George Muller (born 24 August 1912), a German immigrant from Hamburg, Germany who settled in Bucks County, Pennsylvania .

  9. Lanterloo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanterloo

    In 1678 a Dutch periodical records a list of games including Verquere, Karnöffel, Poch, Krimpen, Lansquenet, Triomphe, Piquet, La Bête "and that miserable Lanterlu which is in fashion." [5] Whichever way it had been introduced to Britain, by the turn of the eighteenth century it was already England's most popular card game.