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* Crazy Eights -- a matching game, fairly simple in its basic form, but HouseRules can bring it to {{Calvinball}} levels of complexity. Commercialized as ''Uno''.

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* Crazy Eights -- a matching game, fairly simple in its basic form, but HouseRules can bring it to {{Calvinball}} levels of complexity. Commercialized as ''Uno''.''TabletopGame/{{Uno}}''.
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* TabletopGame/{{Mao}}


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* TabletopGame/TheHobbitCardGame
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* TabletopGame/{{Kings}} -- a combination card and drinking game.


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** TabletopGame/{{Freecell}} -- a Solitaire variant with the possibility to win almost any game.
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Ganjifa (aka Ganjapa or Gânjaphâ) is a card game from the Middle-East and Indian subcontinent. The cards can be circles or rectangles and have a long history. TheOtherWiki [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ganjifa has more.]]


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Ganjifa (aka Ganjapa or Gânjaphâ) is a card game from the Middle-East and Indian subcontinent. The cards can be circles or rectangles and have a long history. TheOtherWiki Wiki/TheOtherWiki [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ganjifa has more.]]

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!! "Dedicated Deck" ganes
Between [=CCGs=] and Deckbuilding are these, which use cards with illustrations to implement whatever game concept the designer had. Like Collectible Card Games, these often have rule text printed on the cards.

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!! "Dedicated Deck" ganes
games
Between [=CCGs=] and Deckbuilding Games are these, which use cards with illustrations to implement whatever game concept the designer had. Like Collectible Card Games, in [=CCGs=], these often have rule text printed on the cards.
cards and decks are set-up before the game. As in Deckbuilding Games, there's usually a fixed number of cards per deck that aren't collected individually, though there may be add-on decks.
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cleaning


Then there are ([=CCGs=]). This genre combines the collectability of, for instance, baseball cards, with the mechanics of a card game. They generally have vivid artwork and complicated effects and strategies. Some take place in an original universe, and others are tie-ins to movies or TV series. Some are massively popular, with [[TournamentPlay tournaments]] and thousands of cards.


to:

Then there are ([=CCGs=]). This genre combines the collectability of, for instance, baseball cards, with the mechanics of a card game. They generally have vivid artwork and complicated effects and strategies. Some take place in an original universe, and others are tie-ins to movies or TV series. Some are massively popular, with [[TournamentPlay tournaments]] and thousands of cards.




A genre genre to [=CCGs=]. Players have individual decks, but they are created during the game from a shared pool. No collectibility is involved, and all players have equal access to cards.


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A genre genre Similar to [=CCGs=]. Players [=CCGs=] in that players have individual decks, but they are created during the game from a shared pool. No collectibility is involved, and all players have equal access to cards.




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Before paper cards, wood or bone tiles were often used and can still be found in some types of "card" games. Tile games like [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominoes Dominoes]] and TabletopGame/{{Mahjong}} even share game types with cards, such as the Trick-Taking Game.



See also [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominoes Dominoes]] and {{Mahjong}}, considered close cousins despite using tiles.

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[[index]]
[floatboxright:
'''Subcategories:'''
* CollectibleCardGame
* DeckbuildingGame
* UsefulNotes/TarotCards
]
[[/index]]



[[index]]



[[/index]]



[[index]]

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[[index]]



[[/index]]



[[index]]
!![[UsefulNotes/TarotCards Tarot Games]]
[[/index]]

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[[index]]
!![[UsefulNotes/TarotCards Tarot Games]]
[[/index]]
!!Tarot Games

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%%[[caption-width-right:350:some caption text]]



-->---'''Seto Kaiba''', ''WebVideo/YuGiOhTheAbridgedSeries''

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-->---'''Seto -->--'''Seto Kaiba''', ''WebVideo/YuGiOhTheAbridgedSeries''



Playing cards originated in China as early as the 11th century and took the world by storm, making up the majority of modern games. When they came to Europe (via Arabic countries) in the late 14th century, the standard of 52 cards, with each of the four suits having cards numbered from 1 to 10 plus three court cards, had already been established. In Europe this system evolved in several directions (regional standards still exist in southern and central Europe). The ''de facto'' international standard of four suits most known today -- hearts, diamonds, spades and clubs -- appeared in 16th century France.

See PlayingCardMotifs.

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Playing cards originated in China as early as the 11th century and took the world by storm, making up the majority of modern games. When they came to Europe (via Arabic countries) in the late 14th century, the standard of 52 cards, with each of the four suits having cards numbered from 1 to 10 plus three court cards, had already been established. In Europe this system evolved in several directions (regional standards still exist in southern and central Europe).


!! Modern Playing Cards
When they came to Europe (via the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silk_Road Silk Road]]) in the late 14th century, the standard of 52 cards, with each of the four suits having cards numbered from 1 to 10 plus three court cards, had already been established.
The ''de facto'' international standard of four suits most known today -- hearts, diamonds, spades and clubs -- appeared in 16th century France.

See PlayingCardMotifs.[[folder:Examples]]



* 31 - Cards are only counted if they are of matching suits, with whoever has the lowest losing a counter (commonly a quarter), if a player is the lowest four times, they are out of the game.
* Blackjack/21 - the gambler's game; made into a game show, as ''Series/{{Gambit}}''
* TabletopGame/{{Bridge}} - the intellectual card game, with a rich {{Metagame}}

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* 31 - -- Cards are only counted if they are of matching suits, with whoever has the lowest losing a counter (commonly a quarter), if a player is the lowest four times, they are out of the game.
* Blackjack/21 - Blackjack [=/=] 21 -- the gambler's game; made into a game show, as ''Series/{{Gambit}}''
* TabletopGame/{{Bridge}} - -- the intellectual card game, with a rich {{Metagame}}



* BS or Bullshit or Cheat - a popular card shedding game that rewards [[RefugeInAudacity outrageous cheating]].
* Crazy Eights - a matching game, fairly simple in its basic form, but HouseRules can bring it to {{Calvinball}} levels of complexity. Commercialized as ''Uno''.
** Has a ridiculous variant, TabletopGame/{{Mao}}. [[MindScrew The only rule of Mao you can know is that you can't know any of the other rules.]]
* TabletopGame/{{Cribbage}}: An old game that uses both a standard deck of cards and a specialized board. OlderThanSteam and still going strong.

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* BS or Bullshit or [=/=] BS [=/=] Cheat - -- a popular card shedding game that rewards [[RefugeInAudacity outrageous cheating]].
* Crazy Eights - -- a matching game, fairly simple in its basic form, but HouseRules can bring it to {{Calvinball}} levels of complexity. Commercialized as ''Uno''.
** Has TabletopGame/{{Mao}} -- a ridiculous variant, TabletopGame/{{Mao}}.variant. [[MindScrew The only rule of Mao you can know is that you can't know any of the other rules.]]
* TabletopGame/{{Cribbage}}: An old
]] UsefulNotes for the game that uses both a standard deck of cards and a specialized board. OlderThanSteam and still going strong.are [[UsefulNotes/{{Mao}} here]].



* Euchre - a partnership-based trick-taking game in the Bridge-Whist family played with a deck of 24 cards (A, K, Q, J, 10, and 9 of each suit). A common pastime in the midwest of America, particularly the Great Lakes area, where it was probably developed by German immigrants; UsefulNotes/{{Michigan}}ders are particularly fanatical about the game.
* [[MostCommonCardGame Go Fish]] - a simple game played by children and those who don't want to think too hard
* TabletopGame/{{Hearts}} - a variation on the classic "four-person trick-winning game" which was once popular, gradually became less so over time, and was then revived when Microsoft [=PCs=] started coming with an electronic version fitted as standard.

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* Euchre - -- a partnership-based trick-taking game in the Bridge-Whist family played with a deck of 24 cards (A, K, Q, J, 10, and 9 of each suit). A common pastime in the midwest of America, particularly the Great Lakes area, where it was probably developed by German immigrants; UsefulNotes/{{Michigan}}ders are particularly fanatical about the game.
* [[MostCommonCardGame Go Fish]] - -- a simple game played by children and those who don't want to think too hard
* TabletopGame/{{Hearts}} - -- a variation on the classic "four-person trick-winning game" which was once popular, gradually became less so over time, and was then revived when Microsoft [=PCs=] started coming with an electronic version fitted as standard.



* UsefulNotes/{{Mao}}
* TabletopGame/{{Poker}} - the mathematician's game, with [[TheMagicPokerEquation associated tropes]]
* TabletopGame/{{Preferans}} - traditionally, the most popular game in UsefulNotes/{{Russia}}. Now not exactly the most popular, but still with a cult following.

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* UsefulNotes/{{Mao}}
* TabletopGame/{{Poker}} - -- the mathematician's game, with [[TheMagicPokerEquation associated tropes]]
* TabletopGame/{{Preferans}} - -- traditionally, the most popular game in UsefulNotes/{{Russia}}. Now not exactly the most popular, but still with a cult following.



* TabletopGame/{{Sheepshead}} - in the same family as Spades and Hearts; popular in Usefulnotes/{{Wisconsin}}.
* TabletopGame/{{Skat}} - traditionally, the most popular game in UsefulNotes/{{Germany}}.
* TabletopGame/{{Solitaire}} - the loner's game; actually a catch-all for hundreds of games played by a single player (not that the media recognize more than one or two variants).
* Spades - another four-person trick-winning game revived by Microsoft.
* Square - a game of the elementary skills of number-matching and teamwork (or, depending on who you're playing with, insanity and more insanity).
* Tarot - a [[http://www.pagat.com/tarot/ family of games distantly related to Bridge and Whist]] and played with various forms of [[UsefulNotes/TarotCards Tarot decks]]. French tarot is particularly interesting because of its three-against-one playing style, but there are other versions played in Italy and central Europe.
* Whist - a popular team-based card game ancestral to Bridge.

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* TabletopGame/{{Sheepshead}} - -- in the same family as Spades and Hearts; popular in Usefulnotes/{{Wisconsin}}.
* TabletopGame/{{Skat}} - -- traditionally, the most popular game in UsefulNotes/{{Germany}}.
* TabletopGame/{{Solitaire}} - -- the loner's game; actually a catch-all for hundreds of games played by a single player (not that the media recognize more than one or two variants).
* Spades - -- another four-person trick-winning game revived by Microsoft.
* Square - -- a game of the elementary skills of number-matching and teamwork (or, depending on who you're playing with, insanity and more insanity).
* Tarot - a [[http://www.pagat.com/tarot/ family of games distantly related to Bridge and Whist]] and played with various forms of [[UsefulNotes/TarotCards Tarot decks]]. French tarot is particularly interesting because of its three-against-one playing style, but there are other versions played in Italy and central Europe.
*
Whist - -- a popular team-based card game ancestral to Bridge.




Other types of playing card decks are in use in Europe and Asia. These include French tarot, Italian tarot and Indian ganjifa. {{Mahjong}} may be considered a close cousin despite using tiles. The tarot deck, by the way, was originally ([[http://www.tarocchino.com/page2.html and still is]]) used for card games, and those games gave rise to the modern concept of a trump suit.

----
Then there are {{Collectible Card Game}}s ([=CCGs=]). This genre combines the collectability of, for instance, baseball cards, with the mechanics of a card game. They generally have vivid artwork and complicated effects and strategies. Some take place in an original universe, and others are tie-ins to movies or TV series. Some are massively popular, with [[TournamentPlay tournaments]] and thousands of cards.

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\nOther types of playing card decks are in use in Europe and Asia. These include French tarot, Italian tarot and Indian ganjifa. {{Mahjong}} may be considered a close cousin despite using tiles. The tarot deck, by the way, was originally ([[http://www.tarocchino.com/page2.html and still is]]) used for card games, and those games gave rise to the modern concept of a trump suit.\n\n----\nThen there are {{Collectible Card Game}}s ([=CCGs=]). This genre combines the collectability of, for instance, baseball cards, with the mechanics of a card game. They generally have vivid artwork and complicated effects and strategies. Some take place in an original universe, and others are tie-ins to movies or TV series. Some are massively popular, with [[TournamentPlay tournaments]] and thousands of cards.\n[[/folder]]




* TabletopGame/BattleSpirits
* Anime/CardfightVanguard
* WesternAnimation/{{Chaotic}}
* VideoGame/ColossalKaijuCombat

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!! {{Collectible Card Game}}s
[[/index]]
Then there are ([=CCGs=]). This genre combines the collectability of, for instance, baseball cards, with the mechanics of a card game. They generally have vivid artwork and complicated effects and strategies. Some take place in an original universe, and others are tie-ins to movies or TV series. Some are massively popular, with [[TournamentPlay tournaments]] and thousands of cards.

[[index]]
!! {{Deckbuilding Game}}s
[[/index]]
A genre genre to [=CCGs=]. Players have individual decks, but they are created during the game from a shared pool. No collectibility is involved, and all players have equal access to cards.


!! "Dedicated Deck" ganes
Between [=CCGs=] and Deckbuilding are these, which use cards with illustrations to implement whatever game concept the designer had. Like Collectible Card Games, these often have rule text printed on the cards.


[[folder:Examples]]
[[index]]
* TabletopGame/BattleSpirits
TabletopGame/ApplesToApples
* Anime/CardfightVanguard
TabletopGame/BackToTheFuture
* WesternAnimation/{{Chaotic}}
TabletopGame/BlankWhiteCards
* VideoGame/ColossalKaijuCombatTabletopGame/CardsAgainstHumanity
* TabletopGame/ChaosMarauders
* TabletopGame/ChezGeek and its sequels (''Slack Attack, Block Party, Chez Greek, Chez Grunt, Chez Goth'' and ''Chez Cthulhu'')
* TabletopGame/{{Chrononauts}}



* TabletopGame/DuelMasters
* TabletopGame/{{Kaijudo}}
* TabletopGame/ForceOfWill
* Anime/FutureCardBuddyfight
* Franchise/HarryPotter
* ''TabletopGame/TheHobbitCardGame''
* Illuminati New World Order
* TabletopGame/LegendOfTheFiveRings
* TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering
* TabletopGame/MitosYLeyendas
* TabletopGame/NetRunner
* Over Power
* TabletopGame/{{Pokemon}}
* Quick Strike
* Anime/SelectorInfectedWixoss
* TabletopGame/TheSpoils
* TabletopGame/StarWarsCustomizableCardGame
* ComicBook/TankVixens
* Universal Fighting System (Or UFS, for short.)
* VideoGame/UrbanRivals
* VS System
* TabletopGame/WeissSchwarz
* WesternAnimation/XiaolinShowdown
* [[TabletopGame/YuGiOh Yu-Gi-Oh!]]
** [[TabletopGame/YuGiOhCarddasVersion Yu-Gi-Oh! (Carddas Version)]]
[[/index]]

{{Deckbuilding Game}}s are a related genre to [=CCGs=]. Players have individual decks, but they are created during the game from a shared pool. No collectibility is involved, and all players have equal access to cards.

[[index]]
* TabletopGame/{{Ascension}}

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* TabletopGame/DuelMasters
* TabletopGame/{{Kaijudo}}
* TabletopGame/ForceOfWill
* Anime/FutureCardBuddyfight
* Franchise/HarryPotter
* ''TabletopGame/TheHobbitCardGame''
* Illuminati New World Order
* TabletopGame/LegendOfTheFiveRings
* TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering
* TabletopGame/MitosYLeyendas
* TabletopGame/NetRunner
* Over Power
* TabletopGame/{{Pokemon}}
* Quick Strike
* Anime/SelectorInfectedWixoss
* TabletopGame/TheSpoils
* TabletopGame/StarWarsCustomizableCardGame
* ComicBook/TankVixens
* Universal Fighting System (Or UFS, for short.)
* VideoGame/UrbanRivals
* VS System
* TabletopGame/WeissSchwarz
* WesternAnimation/XiaolinShowdown
* [[TabletopGame/YuGiOh Yu-Gi-Oh!]]
** [[TabletopGame/YuGiOhCarddasVersion Yu-Gi-Oh! (Carddas Version)]]
[[/index]]

{{Deckbuilding Game}}s are a related genre to [=CCGs=]. Players have individual decks, but they are created during the game from a shared pool. No collectibility is involved, and all players have equal access to cards.

[[index]]
* TabletopGame/{{Ascension}}
TabletopGame/DeathAngel



* TabletopGame/CerberusEngineGames
* VideoGame/HandOfFate
* TabletopGame/HeroRealms
* VideoGame/{{Reigns}}
* TabletopGame/StarRealms
[[/index]]

Between these are "dedicated deck" card games, which use cards with illustrations to implement whatever game concept the designer had. Like Collectible Card Games, these often have rule text printed on the cards.

[[index]]
* TabletopGame/ApplesToApples
* TabletopGame/BackToTheFuture
* TabletopGame/BlankWhiteCards
* TabletopGame/CardsAgainstHumanity
* TabletopGame/ChaosMarauders
* TabletopGame/ChezGeek and its sequels (''Slack Attack, Block Party, Chez Greek, Chez Grunt, Chez Goth'' and ''Chez Cthulhu'')
* TabletopGame/{{Chrononauts}}
* TabletopGame/DrunkQuest
* TabletopGame/DeathAngel
* TabletopGame/{{Dominion}}




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[[/folder]]


!!Ganjifa
Ganjifa (aka Ganjapa or Gânjaphâ) is a card game from the Middle-East and Indian subcontinent. The cards can be circles or rectangles and have a long history. TheOtherWiki [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ganjifa has more.]]


!!Karuta
A number of different card sets and games that fall under two general categories, Portuguese-derived and Eawase Karuta. The original cards were imported to Japan by the Portuguese sailors.

[[folder:Examples]]
* Portuguese-derived Karuta
** Hanafuda [=/=] Go-Stop -- 48 card deck, with four cards for each month of the year. The Korean version Go-Stop adds jokers.
** Harifuda [=/=] Hikifuda -- 48 card deck with 8 copies of one through six cards.
** Kabufuda -- 40 card deck with Jacks as the only face card.
** Komatsufuda -- 48 card deck closest to the Portuguese deck, lacks [=10s=] and has Tarot-style suits.
** Unsun Karuta -- 75 cards, has 5 suits with 15 ranks. There are three extra face cards and one extra suit compared to modern playing cards.
* Eawase Karuta
** Iroha Karuta -- The game with yomifuda (reading cards) and torifuda (grabbing cards), with two sets of 100 poem cards.
** Uta Karuta -- Used for matching games, has 48 syllables in hiragana used to complete 48 proverbs.
[[/folder]]


[[index]]
!![[UsefulNotes/TarotCards Tarot Games]]
[[/index]]
A [[http://www.pagat.com/tarot/ family of games distantly related to Bridge and Whist]] and played with various forms of [[UsefulNotes/TarotCards Tarot decks]]. French tarot is particularly interesting because of its three-against-one playing style, but there are other versions played in Italy and central Europe. The tarot deck was originally used for card games (before fortune-telling) and gave rise to the modern trump suits.
----


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See also [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominoes Dominoes]] and {{Mahjong}}, considered close cousins despite using tiles.
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{{Deckbuilding Game}}s are a subgenre of [=CCGs=]. Players build their decks by exchanging cards during the game.

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{{Deckbuilding Game}}s are a subgenre of related genre to [=CCGs=]. Players build their decks by exchanging cards have individual decks, but they are created during the game.
game from a shared pool. No collectibility is involved, and all players have equal access to cards.
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* TabletopGame/XMenTradingCardGame
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* TabletopGame/HeroRealms

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* Black Jack - the gambler's game

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* Black Jack Blackjack/21 - the gambler's gamegame; made into a game show, as ''Series/{{Gambit}}''


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* High-Lo: Try to guess which card in a line will be high or low. Also made into a game show, as ''Series/CardSharks''.
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DeckbuildingGames are a subgenre of [=CCGs=]. Players build their decks by exchanging cards during the game.

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DeckbuildingGames {{Deckbuilding Game}}s are a subgenre of [=CCGs=]. Players build their decks by exchanging cards during the game.

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Added index of Deckbuilding Games


Then there are [[CollectibleCardGame Collectible Card Games]] ([=CCGs=]). This genre combines the collectability of, for instance, baseball cards, with the mechanics of a card game. They generally have vivid artwork and complicated effects and strategies. Some take place in an original universe, and others are tie-ins to movies or TV series. Some are massively popular, with [[TournamentPlay tournaments]] and thousands of cards.

to:

Then there are [[CollectibleCardGame Collectible {{Collectible Card Games]] Game}}s ([=CCGs=]). This genre combines the collectability of, for instance, baseball cards, with the mechanics of a card game. They generally have vivid artwork and complicated effects and strategies. Some take place in an original universe, and others are tie-ins to movies or TV series. Some are massively popular, with [[TournamentPlay tournaments]] and thousands of cards.



Between these are "dedicated deck" card games, which use cards with illustrations to implement whatever game concept the designer had. Like [[CollectibleCardGame Collectible Card Games]], these often have rule text printed on the cards.

to:

Between these DeckbuildingGames are "dedicated deck" card games, which use a subgenre of [=CCGs=]. Players build their decks by exchanging cards with illustrations to implement whatever game concept during the designer had. Like [[CollectibleCardGame Collectible Card Games]], these often have rule text printed on the cards.
game.



* TabletopGame/ApplesToApples
* TabletopGame/BackToTheFuture
* TabletopGame/BlankWhiteCards
* TabletopGame/CardsAgainstHumanity
* TabletopGame/ChaosMarauders
* TabletopGame/ChezGeek and its sequels (''Slack Attack, Block Party, Chez Greek, Chez Grunt, Chez Goth'' and ''Chez Cthulhu'')
* TabletopGame/{{Chrononauts}}
* TabletopGame/DrunkQuest
* TabletopGame/DeathAngel

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* TabletopGame/ApplesToApples
* TabletopGame/BackToTheFuture
* TabletopGame/BlankWhiteCards
* TabletopGame/CardsAgainstHumanity
* TabletopGame/ChaosMarauders
* TabletopGame/ChezGeek and its sequels (''Slack Attack, Block Party, Chez Greek, Chez Grunt, Chez Goth'' and ''Chez Cthulhu'')
* TabletopGame/{{Chrononauts}}
* TabletopGame/DrunkQuest
* TabletopGame/DeathAngel
TabletopGame/{{Ascension}}


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* TabletopGame/CerberusEngineGames
* VideoGame/HandOfFate
* VideoGame/{{Reigns}}
* TabletopGame/StarRealms
[[/index]]

Between these are "dedicated deck" card games, which use cards with illustrations to implement whatever game concept the designer had. Like Collectible Card Games, these often have rule text printed on the cards.

[[index]]
* TabletopGame/ApplesToApples
* TabletopGame/BackToTheFuture
* TabletopGame/BlankWhiteCards
* TabletopGame/CardsAgainstHumanity
* TabletopGame/ChaosMarauders
* TabletopGame/ChezGeek and its sequels (''Slack Attack, Block Party, Chez Greek, Chez Grunt, Chez Goth'' and ''Chez Cthulhu'')
* TabletopGame/{{Chrononauts}}
* TabletopGame/DrunkQuest
* TabletopGame/DeathAngel
* TabletopGame/{{Dominion}}
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* TabletopGame/EpicCardGame
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* Tarot - a [[http://www.pagat.com/tarot/ family of games distantly related to Bridge and Whist]] and played with various forms of [[TarotMotifs Tarot decks]]. French tarot is particularly interesting because of its three-against-one playing style, but there are other versions played in Italy and central Europe.

to:

* Tarot - a [[http://www.pagat.com/tarot/ family of games distantly related to Bridge and Whist]] and played with various forms of [[TarotMotifs [[UsefulNotes/TarotCards Tarot decks]]. French tarot is particularly interesting because of its three-against-one playing style, but there are other versions played in Italy and central Europe.
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* TabletopGame/MarryingMrDarcy, based on ''Literature/PrideAndPrejudice''

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* TabletopGame/MarryingMrDarcy, TabletopGame/MarryingMrDarcy which is based on ''Literature/PrideAndPrejudice''
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* TabletopGame/MarryMrDarcy, based on ''Literature/PrideAndPrejudice''

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* TabletopGame/MarryMrDarcy, TabletopGame/MarryingMrDarcy, based on ''Literature/PrideAndPrejudice''
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*TabletopGame/MarryMrDarcy, based on ''Literature/PrideAndPrejudice''

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** Has a ridiculous variant, TabletopGame/{{Mao}}. [[MindScrew The only rule of Mao you can know is that you can't know any of the other rules.]]



** Has a ridiculous variant, TabletopGame/{{Mao}}. [[MindScrew The only rule of Mao you can know is that you can't know any of the other rules.]]
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* TabletopGame/{{Cribbage}}: An old game that uses both a standard deck of cards and a specialized board. OlderThanSteam and still going strong.
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* ''TabletopGame/TheHobbitCardGame''
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* UsefulNotes/{{Mao}}
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* TabletopGame/ForceOfWill
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* TabletopGame/Netrunner

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* TabletopGame/NetrunnerTabletopGame/{{Netrunner}}
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* TabletopGame/Netrunner
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* [[VideoGame/KaijuCombat Colossal Kaiju Combat]]

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* [[VideoGame/KaijuCombat Colossal Kaiju Combat]]VideoGame/ColossalKaijuCombat
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* [[VideoGame/KaijuCombat Colossal Kaiju Combat]]
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* {{Preferans}} - traditionally, the most popular game in UsefulNotes/{{Russia}}. Now not exactly the most popular, but still with a cult following.

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* {{Preferans}} TabletopGame/{{Preferans}} - traditionally, the most popular game in UsefulNotes/{{Russia}}. Now not exactly the most popular, but still with a cult following.

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