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All of my freinds talk about how fun Rook is. I have never played. Can someone tell me how to play. I just need to know how to win, the rules. And just about anything else that could help me learn how to play.

2006-12-11 03:38:58 · 5 answers · asked by Andrea luvs u...maybe...lol 3 in Games & Recreation Card Games

5 answers

How to Play Rook
About Rook
In the days of my youth (mid '70s) in a small town in Georgia, we teens would play Rook. There are a number of variations of the game as listed in the official rule book from Parker Brothers. The version we played wasn't any of them. So in the interest of posterity, here's the rules we went by:

Rook is Parker Brothers four-suit numerical card game: "The Game of Games". A Rook deck contains four suits: Red, Green, Black and Yellow. There are numbered cards from 1 to 14 in each deck. This plus the Rook Picture card gives us a total of 57 cards in a Rook deck. In a four-person game we take out the 2s, 3s and 4s. This leaves us with 45 cards we actually play with.

Points
Certain cards count points. The 5s count 5 points each, the 10s count 10 points each, the 14s count 10 points each, the 1s count 15 points each and the Rook counts 20. This makes for a total of 180 points in each hand.

Setup
Rook is generally played with four people. The players who sit opposite each other are partners and constitute a team. The two teams play each other in the game. A game is won when a team reaches a pre-determined number of points, generally 500. A game of 1000 makes for a long game.

Dealing
The cards are delt face-down, 10 to a player. The remaining five cards are placed in the middle of the table with the top card face up. This is the "nest", "kitty" or "widow".

Bidding
After the cards are delt, the person to the dealer's left starts the bidding. The minimum bid is 100. This bid represents the number of points that person feels that their team can capture if they have the priviledge of calling trumps. Bidding proceedes to the left. Bids must be a multiple of 5 (100, 120, 135, etc up to 180). A person can either bid higher than the previous high bid or drop out of the bidding on that hand by saying "pass". The highest bidder (after everyone else has passed) has the priviedge of calling what suit is trumps. The winner of the bid picks up the five cards in the middle of the table, discards five cards of his choice back into the "widow" and calls trumps.

Play Begins
The person who took the bid and called trumps plays a card face up in the middle of the table. Play then proceeds to the left until each player has played a card. These four cards constitue a "trick". The person who played the strongest card takes the trick and retires the cards onto their side. This is called "taking a trick." The person who took the trick gets to lead the first card for the next trick. Play proceeds through 10 tricks as each player plays all their cards.

Play Details
Whatever suit (red, black, green, or yellow) is led, i.e. is the first card played in a trick must be played by each player. If a player doesn't have a card of the suit that was led, he may play a card of any suit. In playing, the strength of the card is its numerical value, except for the "1". It is like an ace, the highest card in each suit. So from lowest to highest, the cards in a suit are 5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,1. The trump suit is the highest suit. If red is trumps and black is led in a trick a player who is out of black may play a red card. If no other player plays a higher red, the person who played the red (trump) card takes the trick. The Rook card is the highest of the suit called as trumps and must be played as a trump card.

Scoring
At the conclusion of the hand each team counts up the point cards they captured in their tricks. If the team that won the bid makes at least their bid, they keep all their points. If they failed to make as many points as they bid they "go set": that is whatever they bid is deducted from their score. The team that didn't win the bid keeps whatever points they made in any event.

Miscellania
Whoever takes the last trick also gets the five cards the winner of the bid set aside as the "widow". It is also possible to call "no trumps": i.e. the highest card of whatever suit leds wins. In this case the Rook can be played at any time and takes the trick. If a person who took the bid can't decide what to call trumps, he can let his partner call trumps. If the bidder discards the widow first, there is no increase in the bid. If he wants his partner to call trumps before the discard, the bid is increased by 5 points. Some people play that if the Rook comes up on top of the widow, all players must "bid blind" i.e. bid without looking at their hand. A special bid is "shoot the moon" this means the player bids 180 points. If the fail, they go set by 180 points, if the make it they get 500 points. In the bidding process, if nobody wants to take the bid, the dealer must take it for the minimum bid, usually 100 points. If a player is delt a hand with no point cards, he can call a mis-deal and get a new hand delt.

Historical Footnote
Why was Rook popular in the South? In the Bible Belt, some considered playing with a standard 52 card deck to be sinful, so they played Rook instead. Rook is somewhat of a "redneck bridge" in that the partners, bidding, trumps and play are somewhat reminiscent of bridge, but much simplified.

2006-12-11 04:54:14 · answer #1 · answered by Answer Champion 3 · 2 0

Rook Card Game

2016-09-28 07:01:05 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

So you know how to play chess. But have you come to a point where you meet a person you just can't beat? Do you know what en passant is? A pawn storm? Lifting a rook? If you answered no to any of the above, this is the place to learn it. Chess can be a fun and intense game if played well, a great way to pass those rainy days

2015-03-30 16:15:58 · answer #3 · answered by Halie 1 · 0 0

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
How do you play Rook?
All of my freinds talk about how fun Rook is. I have never played. Can someone tell me how to play. I just need to know how to win, the rules. And just about anything else that could help me learn how to play.

2015-08-05 23:32:25 · answer #4 · answered by ? 1 · 0 0

Here is the link to a good site that not only tells you the rules and how to play, it also give a little history of the game: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rook_(card_game)
Have fun!

2006-12-11 04:33:48 · answer #5 · answered by DJasmann 1 · 0 0

For the best answers, search on this site https://shorturl.im/awhZx

I just found out that Duelboard is now paying. :( I haven't had any luck either.

2016-04-08 06:22:54 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i don,t know, how do u?

2006-12-11 11:20:10 · answer #7 · answered by c.c. 3 · 0 1

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