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2006-08-06 16:02:55 · 4 answers · asked by 15 yrs. old 1 in Games & Recreation Card Games

4 answers

go to yahoo euchre use link( how to play,) it will give you rules and tips. less confusing that way!

2006-08-06 22:12:20 · answer #1 · answered by Jack's Q&* 7 · 0 0

remove,all 10-A-J-Q-K-9------------ points;JACK OF DIAMONDS ,AND QUEEN OF SPADES.16 POINTS OF YOU HAVE 1 PAIR....32 POINTS, IF YOU HAVE BOTH PAIRS........... THE 4 KINGS IS 10 POINTS,,,THE 4 QUEENS IS 6 POINTS,4 JACKS IS 4 POINTS A,10 points for all four,1 point for.....the 9............a run 10-j-q-k-a is 15 points,16 if you have the 9 any suit.that you can bid on ..........if you have a run,bid 20. now if you have diamonds,the jack of hearts would take any card but the j of diamonds,if you bid spades,the same goes for the j clubs.if you have the two jacks your guaranteed points. hope i did not confuse you.

2006-08-06 23:20:17 · answer #2 · answered by tysgrandma99 4 · 0 0

no one will answer this, I could teach you though

2006-08-06 23:07:19 · answer #3 · answered by pkingman1274 3 · 0 0

Players and Object
Euchre is a plain-trick game for four players in fixed partnerships, partners sitting opposite.

Just 5 cards are dealt to each player and the object is to win at least three of the five tricks - with an extra bonus for winning all five.

Rank of Cards
A pack of 25 cards is used consisting of A K Q J 10 9 in each of the four suits: hearts, diamonds, clubs and spades, plus a joker. If your pack of cards has no joker, the two of spades can be used as a substitute.

The trump suit has 8 cards ranking from highest to lowest as follows:

Benny, or Best Bower (the joker or two of spades)
Right Bower (the jack of the trump suit)
Left Bower (the other jack of the same colour as the trump suit)
Ace
King
Queen
Ten
Nine
The other suits have 6 or 5 cards ranking as normal: A K Q (J) 10 9.

Note that Benny and Left count for all purposes as belonging to the trump suit. For example if hearts are trumps, the jack of diamonds is a heart not a diamond. It can be played to a heart lead and if it is led, hearts must be followed.

The word Bower comes from the German Bauer, which means farmer or peasant and is also a word for Jack.

The Deal
The first dealer is selected at random. The turn to deal then rotates clockwise throughout the game. The dealer shuffles and the player to dealer's left may either cut or "bump" - that is, knock the cards to indicate that they should be dealt as they are, without cutting.

Five cards are dealt to each player in two rounds. The dealer deals clockwise, giving each player a packet of two or three cards in any order - any player who was dealt two in the first round gets three in the second and vice versa.

The dealer then turns the next card in the pack face up. This up-card is used as a basis for selecting the trump suit. The remaining four cards are left face-down and are not used.

Making trump
This process determines the trump suit and which team are the makers - that is the team which undertakes to win three tricks. First each player in turn, beginning with the player to the dealer's left, has the option of accepting up-card's suit as the trump suit or passing. Specifically:

The player to dealer's left may either pass or say "I order it up"
If the first player passes, the dealer's partner may either pass or say "I turn it down"
If the first two players pass, the player to dealer's right may either pass or say "I order it up"
If all three other players pass, the dealer may either take up the up-card, saying "I take it up", or pass by saying "over" and turning the up-card face-down.
If either of the dealer's opponents order it up or if dealer decides to take it up, the suit of the up-card becomes trump; the dealer adds the up-card to her hand and discards a card face-down. Note that (at least in this version of Euchre), the dealer's partner cannot make trumps and play with a partner. The dealer's partner can only make the turned up suit trumps by playing alone. In Britain this is done by saying "I turn it down", in which case the dealer's cards are placed face-down on the table and dealer's partner plays alone, with the turned suit as trump.

If all four players pass, the up-card is turned face-down, and there is a second round in which players have the option to make any suit trump, other than the suit of the up-card. Again the player to dealer's left speaks first and may either pass again or name a suit. If the first player passes the second may name a suit or pass, and so on. If all four players pass a second time the cards are thrown in and the next player deals.

Note that the trump making process ends as soon as someone accepts or makes trump (rather than passing). That player's side are the makers and the other side are the defenders.

If the Benny is turned up then the dealer's team are automatically the makers - no one else gets an opportunity. The dealer must choose a trump suit without looking at her cards. She then picks up her five cards and the Benny and discards one.

Going Alone
After trump has been made, but before the first lead, any player may announce that they are playing alone. The partner of a lone player puts her cards face-down and takes no part in the play.

Either a member of the makers side or a defender may play alone. It is even possible that a maker and a defender choose to play alone, in which case there will be only two active players.

The Play
If all four players are in the game, the play begins with the player to the dealer's left leading to the first trick. If one player is playing alone, the person to that player's left leads first. If two players are playing alone, the defender leads.

Any card may be led, and each player in clockwise order must follow suit by playing a card of the same suit as the card led if possible. A player who cannot follow suit may play any card.

Remember that, for purposes of following suit, Benny and the Left Bower are considered to belong to the trump suit and not to any other suit.

The trick is won by whoever played the highest card of the suit led, unless a trump was played in which case the highest trump wins. The winner of each trick leads to the next one.

Scoring
If all four players are playing then the scores are as follows:

If the makers win 3 or 4 tricks they score one point.
If the makers win all 5 tricks they score two points.
If the makers take fewer than three tricks they are said to be euchred, and the defenders score two points.
If a member of the makers' team is playing alone and wins all 5 tricks, the team scores 4 points instead of 2 - otherwise the scores are as above.

If a member of the defenders' team is playing alone and succeeds in winning at least 3 tricks, thereby euchring the makers, the defenders score 4 points instead of 2 - otherwise the scores are as above.

The game is normally played to 11 points - that is, the team who first reach 11 or more points over several deals win the game. It is usual for each team to keep score using a spare 5 and 6 from the pack (as these cards are not used in the game). The cards are arranged on the table so that the number of pips showing shows the team's current score. Sometimes people play to 15 points (using a 7 and an 8 to keep score) or to 10 points.

Six Player Euchre
In Cornwall, England, this is played between two teams of three, sitting alternately. Either adds the sevens and eights to the pack, making 33 cards (the 8 and 7 are then the lowest cards of each suit, below the 9), or play with a double 25 card pack - 50 cards in all.

When playing with a double pack, if two equally high cards are played to a trick, the second to be played beats the first. If the two Bennies are red and black, the one which is the same colour as the trump suit beats the other one. If they both look the same, then the second one played beats the other, as with other cards.

If a player wants to play alone, both of the player's partners discard their hands face down, but the lone player can ask one of them for a card. The partner asked gives a card of his choice to the lone player, without consultation and without showing it to the others, and the lone player discards a card face-down in return.

The score for winning all the tricks or euchring the makers is 3 points instead of 2. If the winner is playing alone the score is 6 points instead of 4.

North American Euchre
In Canada and the USA, Euchre is played without a joker, so that there are just 24 cards in the deck, and the right bower is the highest trump. The target score is 10 points (not 11). The score is indicated by using two low cards overlapped - some use a six and a four, some use two fives, and some use a two and a three like this:


In the USA any player, including the dealer's partner, is allowed to order up the up-card and play with a partner. In other places - Australia, England and Canada - if the dealer's partner orders the card up, he/she must play alone; therefore the dealer's cards are laid face-down and the dealer does not play the hand.

Some people do not allow a defender to play alone - only the maker is allowed to play alone. Some only allow a defender to play alone against a lone maker.

In Canada it is not usual for the cards to be cut before dealing, and in many groups the cards are dealt one at a time, rather than in twos and threes..

A common method of choosing the first dealer is to deal the cards around until a black jack appears.

Stick the Dealer (also known as "Screw the dealer"). In this variation the dealer cannot pass a second time when naming the trump suit. On the second round, if the first three players pass, the dealer must name a suit. This variation is often played when playing time is constrained.

The Super-Euchre A "Super-Euchre" occurs when the making team takes zero tricks. Some play that the defending team then scores 4 points.

Railroading. This is a variation in which, if your partner is going to play alone, you may pass your partner a card (your best card) face down. Before looking at this card partner must choose whether to discard a card from hand and take the card offered in exchange, or to discard the offered card.

Some people play that if the first three players pass, the dealer is only allowed to take up the turned trump if already holding at least one trump in hand. For this purpose, the left bower is not counted as a trump.

Variations
Buck Euchre (Cut-Throat Euchre)
This game for three or four players, playing as individuals, is described on a separate page.

32 card Euchre
In some places the 8s and 7s are included in the pack as the lowest cards in each suit, making a pack of 32 or 33 cards. This makes it more uncertain whether the high cards are in play. I am told that 32 card Euchre is the usual version in New Zealand. Also there are a few people in the USA who still play this way.

Six Hand Almonte Euchre
Mike Lunney contributed the following variation, which is played in Almonte, in eastern Ontario, Canada.

Rules are the same as six player Euchre above, but with the following variations:

There are 6 players (3 per team) using a 30 card deck consisting of 8-9-10-Q-K-A-J in each suit, plus three jokers, represented by the 2,3,and 4 of spades (4 is the highest trump, followed by 3, 2, right bower, left bower, A, K, Q, 10, 9).

The dealer distributes 5 cards to each of the 6 players and then turns over the last one (i.e. no hidden cards). If the card turned up is a joker, then dealer calls the trump before looking in his or her hand.

Scoring is the same as for British six player Euchre described above, but play is up to fifteen. Or in euchre leagues, players play twice around the table (i.e. 12 hands) before moving to another table.

There is a version in which, if a joker is turned up, the dealer cannot turn it over at the end of the first round of bidding, but must take it into his or her hand and become the maker, assuming the other 5 players have passed on the called trump.

A four-hand variation is played with 21 cards: the Q-K-A-J of clubs and diamonds, the 10-Q-K-A-J of hearts and spades, plus the 3 jokers; scoring is the same as in six-hand.

Bid Euchre
There are many varieties of this. See the Bid Euchre page.

Terminology and Sayings
From England
have an eye
have a score of at least one
whitewashed
beaten without score (i.e. 11-0)
dockyard play or playing policeman
opponents of dealer who do not order up with good cards, in the hope of euchring the dealer's team
From North America
Bill Le May contributed the following sayings:

Don't send a boy to the mill
said when you trump a suit trick with something like a 9 or 10 and the other opponent takes it with something higher.
Crossing the creek
when the top card is turned down and someone makes trump of the oposite color.
Dutchman's Point
is the point you win when you're holding both bowers and the ace of trump. (In the USA, where the joker is not used, these are the highest three trumps).
Bushing or Waiting in the bushes
is passing when you hold enough cards to make trump, hoping instead to euchre the opponent who picks up.
Having a dog from every county
means your five cards comprise all four suits, usually low cards.
Some sayings from Indiana, USA, contributed by Chris Carter and Chris Patterson:

to be set
to be euchred
Sweep or March
winning all the tricks
In the barn
one point away from victory (usu. 9 points)
To get cut
to lead an ace that gets trumped by the first opponent
Loner
a hand suitable for playing alone
Lay-down loner
a loner consisting of unbeatable cards (for example, if you have the first lead: right, left, trump ace, another trump, any off ace). [Of course this is not laydown if the lone player does not have the first lead. In some places, a variation is played in which if you play a loner you never get the lead. If the player to your right leads first you would need five trumps including the top three for a lay-down loner. If the player to the left of the loner leads, then five trumps including two bowers is enough.]
Walk
a low card is led and takes the trick (usually expressed in amazement or disgust: "The ^#$@&^*(@! queen walked!"
Next
After the up-card is turned down, the player to the dealer's left may call "next" to indicate that the same-color suit as the turned-down card is to be named the trump suit.
Historical Note
Euchre was probably derived from the game Jucker which was formerly played in Alsace. Euchre reached the USA in the early nineteenth century and was the original game for which the Joker was introduced into the playing-card pack in the 1850s (to serve as the highest trump). It has already been mentioned that Euchre is popular in the US Navy, and it may be through this maritime connection that it travelled in the later nineteenth century from America to other English speaking parts of the world. Certainly in Britain it is mainly found in regions where there has been a strong Naval influence.

Other Euchre Web Sites
Matt Schemmel and Erin O'Neil's Semi-Official Euchre Home Page has rules, advice and printable tournament scorecards.
Harvey Lapp's Euchrelinks.com site has rules of the American game, tips for improving you play, advice on protecting yourself from players who cheat, and a shop for Euchre equipment.
John Hay's Euchre page
John Hughes' Euchre Board site gives rules and variations. From this site you can buy a Euchre Board - a felt playing surface for the game plus cards, trump markers, instructions, etc.
Alazn Gilfoy's Euchre page
Archive copy of Dave Barker's former Euchre page
Brad Wilson's Card Games pages include several Euchre and Bid Euchre variants.
Bram Kivenko's pages on Euchre probabilities, strategies and a glossary.
On the island of Guernsey, in the English Channel, Euchre (played with 33 cards including a joker) is the national game. The Guernsey United Euchre League site has details of league rules, matches and results.
Perry's Euchre Universe Blog discusses Euchre strategy and other Euchre-related topics.
Natty Bumppo has invented a Euchre Solitaire game.
Joe Chellman has published a page on Euchre for Two Players.
Grandprix Card Tournaments organises the World Series of Spades, Hearts and Euchre.

Natty Bumppo's Columbus Book of Euchre gives not only rules but also plenty of discussion of tactics, local traditions and sayings from Columbus, Indiana, USA. On the web site you can see extracts from the book, and an appendix containing additional material. There are also Reviews of other books on Euchre.

You can order The Columbus Book of Euchre from amazon.com


From Jeri Lunney's Euchre Tallies page you can obtain tallies for Euchre parties of up to 160 people in tables of four and six - scorecards showing the arrangement of players and movement from table to table.

From Michael Weaver's 4 Player Euchre Rotation & Scorecards site you can obtain a spreadsheet which provides scorecards and rotation charts for 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14, and 16 players.

The Semi-Official Euchre Tournament Page has seating arrangements and scorecards for Euchre tournaments for various numbers of players.

The Euchre2Go Kit includes euchre scorekeepers, euchre trump indicators, and a deck of euchre cards.

Euchre Software and Servers
A shareware program for playing both two-handed Euchre and Écarté against your computer or an online opponent can be downloaded from MeggieSoft Games.

With DreamQuest Software's Championship Euchre Pro you can play on line or against a computer opponent. Available for PC-Windows, Palm, Pocket PC, cell phones, and Macintosh. You can download a free trial version of Championship Euchre Pro for Windows XP.

The Real Deal from MVP Software includes a Euchre program.

Here is Terry Burlison's shareware Ultimate Euchre program, with which you can play Euchre against the computer or with live opponents over the Internet.

Hardwood Euchre from Silver Creek Entertainment can be played against the computer or on line against live opponents.

Scot Cunningham has written the free Euchre Dog program for Windows.

Here is Todd Jeffreys' free Euchre for Windows.

Special K Software has developed software to play the card game of Euchre. This software is available at http://home.dezzanet.net.au/gmckay or http://www.geocities.com/garrymckay.

Mike's Cards includes a Euchre program for Macintosh and Windows computers.

Freeverse software publishes a Euchre computer game for the Macintosh and Windows.

Some more sites where you can play Euchre on-line against live opponents:

Case's Ladder Online features online play versus computer or real opponents, automated online leagues and a tournament ranking system.
Mystic Island organises tournaments, leagues and ladders
IPlay
PlaySite
Yahoo! Games
Game Desire
Kurnik Online Games
Game Zone
Pogo
Tams11 lobby
The Euchre Players Club is aimed mainly at Pogo on-line euchre players, but contains information relevant to all euchre players. It includes a registry of players, links to lounges, strategies and terminology.

The Paid to Play Euchre site offers software by means of which you can be paid to have advertising displayed on your screen while you play Euchre on line.



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Last updated 5th August 2006

2006-08-06 23:09:07 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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