Ristikontra

Ristikontra or Ristiklappi, sometimes translated as Cross-clap, is a Finnish point-trick game for four players using a standard 52-card pack. Card suits do not play a role in this game, and there is no ranking order. A trick is won by the last player to play a card of the same rank as the card led.[1]:259[2]:305f[3]

Ristikontra
A point-trick game in which tricks are won by matching rank
Alternative namesRistiklappi
TypeTrick-taking
Players2×2
Cards52
PlayClockwise
Related games
Sedma

The game is a highly unusual member of the Ace-Ten family, immediately related only to the Central European card game known as Sedma, Hola or Zsírozás.[4]:268

Basic rules

Point-values of cards
Rank A10KQJ98765432
Value 1110432

The game is played by four players in fixed partnerships, sitting crosswise. A standard pack of 52 cards is used. The suits are irrelevant for this game, and the ranks are not ordered in a hierarchy. The cards have the card-point values that are standard for games of the Ace–Ten family: ace 11, king 4, queen 3, jack 2, ten 10. There are 120 card-points in the pack. The object of the game is to win more than half the card-points in tricks, i.e. at least 61 points. A party that wins all card-points wins double.[1]:259[2]:305f[3]

Every player is dealt 6 cards. The remaining cards form a stock from which the players fill up their hands while it lasts.[1]:259[2]:305f[3]

Eldest hand leads any card to the first trick. The remaining players are completely free in which card to play to the trick. The last player to play a card of the same rank as the card led wins the trick and leads to the next trick. While the stock lasts, after each trick the players fill up their hands, starting with the winner of the trick.[1]:259[2]:305f[3]

Instead of playing a card from their hand, players also have the option of playing in the dark by playing the top card of the stock instead of a hand card. In this case they do not draw a card when the trick is over, as their hand is already complete.[1]:259[2]:305f[3]

Variations

Point-values of cards
Rank AKQJ1098765432
Value 54321
  • Card ranks are sometimes assigned the alternative card-point values ace 5, king 4, queen 3, jack 2 and ten 1. In this case tens are low and there are 60 card-points in the pack, and 31 are needed to win the game.[3]
  • When both parties have the same number of card-points, the number of tricks may be used to break the tie.[3]
  • No player may lead with the same rank to four consecutive tricks.[3]
  • A player who won a trick with a hand card (as opposed to one from the stock), has the right to spice the trick by replacing the winning card with the card drawn from the stock.[1]:259[3]
  • Players play with a hand of 5 cards rather than 6.[3]
  • Any party that has won a trick containing a queen in the first phase of trick-play, must clean in the second phase. The second phase starts as soon as the stock is empty. To clean, the party must win a trick containing king, but must not win it with a queen. So that this remains possible, it is not allowed to play the last king in the first phase. A party that is obliged to clean but fails to do so loses dishonourably and may not touch the cards until the cards have been dealt for the next round.[3]
gollark: At least use lossless compression.
gollark: I mean on the ban *page* it has a "funny" GIF or something. There was that thing with scanning a QR code to log in a while ago which was also made worse by them being unclear.
gollark: It's bad UX to make people have to try and search for useful features. Same with the "fun" messages on bans and whatnot instead of useful usable descriptions.
gollark: Discord should really make it an actual visible documented switch.
gollark: What is "sleep"?

References

  1. Parlett, David (2008), The Penguin Book of Card Games (3rd ed.), Penguin Books, ISBN 978-0-14-103787-5.
  2. Parlett, David (2004), The A–Z of card games (2nd ed.), Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-860870-7.
  3. McLeod, John, ed., Ristikontra, Card Games Website.
  4. Parlett, David (1990), The Oxford guide to card games: a historical survey, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-214165-1.
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