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In the US I think it is known as Michigan.
I used to play it years ago and now I have just forgotten how to play it.

2007-02-19 23:33:48 · 6 answers · asked by knowitall 4 in Games & Recreation Card Games

6 answers

http://www.pagat.com/stops/michigan.html

all answers are here

2007-02-19 23:40:21 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Newmarket Card Game

2016-10-18 04:26:33 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

omg! this is the best game ever! ok: First, take out all the aces. People will then bet on these as the winners. Take 2 coins/notes, lay one on an ace card and the other to one side as the POT. (lol) Shuffle and deal the cards. The dealer will always get 2 sets. The dealer then chooses the deck to play with but can only look at one or the other, then choose. The player to the left (or youngest) then picks out a card which has the lowest value in RED. For example: 2 of hearts, then someone will put down (on the table) the 3 of hearts... it goes on until there is nobody with a higher card. I The last person to put down a card is then asked to put down their lowest card in BLACK. If that person has no black (it happens!), play passes to the next person! Repeat until you reach the royalty. The person to lay down the king of a suit wins any money people have bet on that suit (on the ace!) this continues until somebody has put down all their cards, that person then wins the money in the pot. Have fun!

2016-03-19 03:02:18 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

you need 4 people to play, and a dummy hand, put a dish in the middle of the table so you can put your bets into it(you need loose change to share among the players) place the aces round the bet dish in the middle, deal all the card between 5, (4 players and the dummy) place bets on your aces and a token bet in the pot, start playing by 2 of clubs whoever has the 3 the 4 etc places cards till no more can be played, next round is the person who put the last card down start with the lowest card in their hand , do this till all cards are played, whoever places the king down gets whats on the ace of the same suit, first to finnish their cards gets the money that is in the dish in the middle. hope this is clear, much easier to show somone how to play rather than decribe it in writing

2007-02-19 23:43:09 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Newmarket (in US called Michigan) is suitable for about 3 to 8 players. It is a fairly simple stops game in which the aim is to get rid of your cards first, and to win stakes by playing particular cards.

Cards and Layout
A standard 52 card deck is used. The cards in each suit rank from lowest to highest: 2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-J-Q-K-A.

During the game stakes are placed on a layout. This can be a board or cloth, or can be made by laying out cards from a second deck on which the stakes are placed. The layout consists of areas representing the following cards:
AH
KC
QD
JS

These are sometimes called the pay cards or boodle cards.

Placing Stakes and Dealing
Before the deal, the dealer places two chips on each boodle card and the other players put one chip on each.

The deal is clockwise, and the turn to deal passes to the left after each hand. The dealer deals one hand to each player and one spare hand. Dealer exchanges or auctions the spare hand
Some play that if you are the dealer, after you have dealt and looked at your cards, you have the option of exchanging your hand for the face down spare hand. You are not allowed to look at the spare hand before deciding to exchange. Alternatively, if you do not want to exchange, you can auction the unseen spare hand to the highest bidder. The person (if any) who buys the spare hand discards their own original hand face down and pays the dealer in chips the amount bid for the spare hand. All of the cards are dealt out one at a time; some players will have one card more than others, but this does not matter. The players look at their cards, and the spare hand is left face down and not used in the game.

The Play
All plays are made by placing a card face up on the table in front of you. The different players' cards are not mixed together but are kept in front of the person who played them until the end of the play.

The person to the left of the dealer begins. They can play any suit, but must play the lowest card they hold in that suit. Whoever has the next higher card of the same suit must now play it, followed by the holder of the card after that, and so on until either the ace is reached or no one can play because no one holds the next higher card of the suit (it might be in the spare hand or have been played earlier). A card which no one can follow, because no one has the next higher card in that suit, is called a stop card.

The last person who played a card (the ace or the stop card) now starts again. Again they can play any suit but must play the lowest card they hold in that suit.

During the play, anyone who manages to play a card which matches one of the boodle cards takes all the chips on that card.

As soon as any player runs out of cards, the play ends. All the other players must pay one chip for each card remaining in their hand. The player who ran out of cards collects all of these chips.

Any chips remaining on the layout stay there for the next hand.

Variations
Free placement of chips
Some play that at the start of the hand you must put a fixed number of chips on the layout (say 6), but you can distribute them as you like among the boodle cards. For example you could put all 6 chips on one card if you wanted to. As this happens before the deal, there is of course no way of knowing which cards are the best investment.

Compulsory change of suit
Some play that when starting again after a stop or and ace, you must if possible play a card of a different suit from the one that was just played. If you can't play a different suit, there are two views as to what happens:
If you have no option, you can play the same suit.
If you have nothing but cards of the suit that was just played, the turn to play passes to the next player to your left. If no one has any other suit the play ends at this point, and there is no payment for the cards players have left in their hands.

2007-02-20 03:59:03 · answer #5 · answered by Danny99 3 · 0 0

no i know quite a lot of card games but nothing like it and all the card books do not seem to have it. maybe it is another name for a game.

2007-02-20 05:32:32 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

no

2007-02-19 23:37:46 · answer #7 · answered by ♥Hockey-Gal♥ 2 · 0 1

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