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  2. Ligretto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ligretto

    The game initiates when a player exclaims "Ligretto!" Then, players simultaneously discard cards onto the central table area. A legal card is any that is the next card in numerical order and in the same colour as the one currently in any pile, or a '1' card. New piles can only be initiated when a player acquires and plays a '1' card.

  3. Taco Cat Goat Cheese Pizza - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taco_Cat_Goat_Cheese_Pizza

    The game is recommended for 2–8 players ages eight and up, and it is estimated to take about 10 minutes. There are 64 cards in a deck, with eight types of cards: Taco, Cat, Goat, Cheese, Pizza, Gorilla, Groundhog, and Narwhal. Each card says its name and has a simple illustration of the object or animal. [4]

  4. Expandable card game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expandable_card_game

    ECGs are often mistaken for CCGs. However, while these games are very similar to CCGs and can be seen as their subset (Fantasy Flight Games, for example, defines a "Living Card Game" as "a game that breaks away from the traditional Collectible Card Game (CCG) model" [10]), they crucially lack randomness in the purchase and distribution of the cards.

  5. Aces Up - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aces_Up

    Aces Up is a quick and simple, one-pack, patience or solitaire card game. [2] [3] One advantage of Aces Up is its minimal use of space: it requires only four piles of cards, and a place to discard cards to. Winning chances with good play are about 1 in 43 games. [4]

  6. Lunch Money (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunch_Money_(game)

    Any number of First Aid cards may be played at the same time, either on a player's turn, or as a last-ditch defense if a player takes enough damage from an attack that he or she would otherwise be out of the game. Humiliation, the trump card of the game, is usually used as a Defense since it immediately cancels the effect of any single card ...

  7. Last card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Last_Card

    Last card is a shedding-type card game popular in New Zealand [1] and Australia. [citation needed] It is similar in most aspects to Uno, Mau Mau, or crazy eights, but several rules differentiate it, for instance the function of a particular card. Deal seven cards to each player.

  8. Thirty-one (card game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thirty-one_(card_game)

    At the end of the game, the winner is decided in the same way as in the normal game of Thirty-One, although if a player has a hand of three cards of the same suit and is greater than 21, they may choose to restart the game making their hand the new face-up hand for the new game and re-dealing all hands for the other players and the face-down hand.

  9. Panguingue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panguingue

    The card must be used in a valid meld (which must be placed on the table) or immediately discarded (unlike other rummy-style games, you cannot add the card to your hand and discard another). If a card is discarded that fits an open meld, that card must be used (Forcing). Discards which play on the next players melds may be forced onto the next ...