Donkey Card Game
Vintage Russell Mfg Co. Tail the Donkey card game - appears complete but directions states there should be three (3) directions cards, and there are only two (2.) Directions appear complete with just the two cards, so am unsure. Otherwise, 37 picture cards of the donkey are complete. Box has light shelf wear. Donkey is a simple game that children enjoy and can be played with a standard deck of cards. It is best to use a special Donkey card deck though because kids like to identify the animals. Special decks are often called something else or feature a different animal but the rules stay the same. The Donkey Card Creator creates a fully customizable set of Sight Words Donkey playing cards. You can use one (or more) sight words lists (Dolch, Fry, Top 150) and/or use your own custom words. To create your Donkey Cards. Cangkul is a simple but popular Indonesian game, in which players try to get rid of cards by following suit. A very similar game 'Donkey' is played in Goa. There is also a closely related Spanish game known as Burro (Donkey).
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For Android: 4.1 and up | Guide: Donkey Master: Donkey Card Game cheats tutorial |
When updated: 2018-03-09 | Star Rating: 4.8 |
Name: Donkey Master: Donkey Card Game hack for android | Extension: Apk |
Author: CodeHound | File Name: in.codehound.donkey |
Current Version: | User Rating: Everyone |
Downloads: 1000-5000 | Version: mod, apk, unlock |
System: Android | Type: Education |
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About the application:
Donkey Masters is Online Multiplayer adaptation of the your childhood favorite card mini game Donkey! Donkey card mini game is played in India in every household at family get-together and parties.Features: • First-ever online multiplayer ver of Donkey card mini game• Play with gamers all over the globe with Multiplayer mode• Challenge your mates in a 'Personal Match'• Play 'Offline' when you are not connected to Internet• Put your desired Bet amounts• Chat Live with your mates while playing• Designed for both smartphones and tabletsObjective of the mini game is to empty your cards before your enemies. The user who is left with the maximum number of cards in the end of the mini game is crowned as 'DONKEY'.Every round consists of every users dealing 1 card of the same suit. The user who deals the card with highest value in a round, starts the next round.
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Players aim to collect four cards of the same rank | |
Alternative names | Pig |
---|---|
Type | Collecting |
Players | 3-13 (4-7 best)[1] |
Skills required | Stealth, memorising |
Age range | 7+[1] |
Deck | French |
Play | Clockwise |
Related games | |
Happy Families, My Ship Sails, Spoons |
Donkey, also known as Pig, is a collecting card game that is best for five or six players. It is played with a 52-card French pack.[2] It has variants such as Spoons and may be descended from an old game called Vive l'Amour.[1]
Rules[edit]
The following rules are based on Arnold (2009) and Parlett (2008).[1][2]
Preliminaries[edit]
A standard 52-card pack is used from which as many quartets (four of a kind) are removed as there are players. For example, six players would use 24 cards which could be four each of Aces, Queens, Tens, Sevens and Threes. This sets the maximum number of players at thirteen; Parlett suggests that five or six is optimum, while Arnold suggests four to seven are best. Any player may deal as the role of dealer is not critical, nor is the position of players in the round. Players are dealt four cards each.
Playing[edit]
Each player looks at their hand and selects a card to get rid of, passing it face down to the player on their left. Players do this simultaneously, not in rotation, so that players cannot use the card they receive to decide what to shed. Once again, players examine their cards and pass one card to the left. This process continues until one player has collected a quartet in their hand, called a book.[1]
The player with the quartet does not announce it, but quietly places their hand down and touches their nose, keeping it there. As other players notice, they do the same. The last player to touch their nose is the Donkey (or Pig), i.e. the loser.
Variants[edit]
Spoons[edit]
The following rules are based on Arneson.[3]
The aim is as for Donkey: to be first to collect a quartet. Two or more play using one or more 52-card French decks. A number of spoons, one fewer than the number of players, are placed in the middle, handles outwards. The dealer deals four cards to each player, places the rest down as a stock.
The dealer draws the top card from the stock, and either discards it or exchanges it with a hand card, passing the discard, face down, to the player on their left. That player selects a hand card to discard and passes it left. Subsequent players do the same, in rotation, except for the last player, who discards their card into a wastepile next to the stock. This process continues, with the dealer drawing from the stock and the last player discarding to the wastepile. If the stock runs out, the dealer draws from the wastepile.
As soon as a player has a quartet, that player takes a spoon. As other players notice, they do likewise until one player is left, empty-handed, as the loser. That player is either eliminated, the game reducing by one player each round. (Alternatively, the loser is given the letter 'S' and, for each subsequent loss, another letter from the word, spoon, dropping out of the game on reaching 'N'.) The game continues until only one player remains, becoming the overall winner.
Strategies may include:
- Bluffing: Bluffing is allowed. Spoons may be reached at any time as long as they are not touched. This may distract the others or even cause someone to grab a spoon prematurely which may result in their elimination.
- Eyes on the spoons: Players keep an eye on the number of spoons in case one has been taken without anyone noticing.
- Eyes off the cards: Players play without looking at their hands, just passing the discards on while watching the spoons.
Other variants[edit]
- Extreme Spoons: Instead of placing the spoons in the middle, they are placed in some inconvenient location nearby.
- Joker Spoons: The deck includes jokers which act as wild cards.
- Tongue: The first player to collect a quartet sticks out their tongue. The last one to do likewise loses.
See also[edit]
- Happy Families - another quartet-collecting game
- My Ship Sails - a collecting game in which seven or eight cards of one suit are needed to win
References[edit]
- ^ abcdeArnold 2009, p. 89. sfn error: no target: CITEREFArnold2009 (help)
- ^ abParlett 2008, p. 399. sfn error: no target: CITEREFParlett2008 (help)
- ^Arneson 2019. sfn error: no target: CITEREFArneson2019 (help)
Literature[edit]
- Arnold, Peter (2009). Chambers card games for families. Chambers Harrap, Edinburgh. ISBN978-0550-10470-0
- Parlett, David (2008). The Penguin Book of Card Games, Penguin, London. ISBN978-0-141-03787-5
External links[edit]
- Arneson, Erik (2019). How to Play Spoons at www.thesprucecrafts.com.
- Rules for Spoons at boardgames.about.com
- Rules for Pig at Classic Games and Puzzles.com