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  2. Standard 52-card deck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_52-card_deck

    The standard 52-card deck [citation needed] of French-suited playing cards is the most common pack of playing cards used today. The main feature of most playing card decks that empower their use in diverse games and other activities is their double-sided design, where one side, usually bearing a colourful or complex pattern, is exactly ...

  3. List of traditional card and tile packs - Wikipedia

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

    There are a multitude of decks designed for specific card games. So much so that there is a separate list of dedicated deck card games. Traditionally, decks made for the quartets family (like Happy families, Authors, and Go Fish) and for the match to shed family (like Black Peter and Old Maid) have been around since the late nineteenth century. [4]

  4. Minchiate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minchiate

    This deck was created by inserting the 20 new trumps as a single block between trump 15 and The Star, which is now trump 36. The new deck proved so much more popular, that the 77-card deck ceased production and the older name of minchiate was transferred over to the larger deck during the 17th century. The game spread from Florence to the rest ...

  5. French-suited playing cards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French-suited_playing_cards

    The majority of decks sold in this pattern is the 52-card deck. One deck invented in the United States but more commonly found in Australia and New Zealand contains 11s, 12s, and red 13s to play the six-handed version of the Euchre variant 500. [49] In the late nineteenth century, they were also used for variants of draw poker and royal cassino.

  6. Ace of spades - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ace_of_spades

    The system was changed again in 1862 when official threepenny duty wrappers were introduced and, although the makers were free to use whatever design they wanted, most chose to keep the ornate ace of spades that is popular today. [6] The ace of spades is thus used to show the card manufacturer's information.

  7. Card game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Card_game

    It is derived from 16th-century Portuguese decks, after undergoing a long evolution driven by laws enacted by the Tokugawa shogunate attempting to ban the use of playing cards The best-known deck internationally is the English pattern of the 52-card French deck, also called the International or Anglo-American pattern, used for such games as ...

  8. Deuce (playing card) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deuce_(playing_card)

    This card became the highest value playing card in the German card deck, the equivalent of the Ace in the French deck. Dummett (1980) assesses that this had happened by the 1470s because the Ace, originally the lowest card of each suit, had disappeared from German-suited packs by then and that, subsequently, under the influence of foreign card ...

  9. Russian playing cards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_playing_cards

    Russian playing card deck (face cards) designed by Adolf Charlemagne. The design of the Russian card decks were derived and influenced by the German card decks as well as the French card decks. Russian cards in the market were divided into three or four categories, depending on the quality of paper and printing: from cheapest decks for laymen ...