Skip to Content
About us
Blog & Maps
Requests
Travel-Games.co.uk
Login Account
0
0
Online Shop
About us
Blog & Maps
Requests
Travel-Games.co.uk
Login Account
0
0
Online Shop
About us
Blog & Maps
Requests
Login Account
Online Shop
Travel-Games Shop Quattro Trick-Taking (IMPORT)
processed_e8fbe04d6c8d43f98e0fa3f747585806.jpeg Image 1 of
processed_e8fbe04d6c8d43f98e0fa3f747585806.jpeg
processed_e8fbe04d6c8d43f98e0fa3f747585806.jpeg

Quattro Trick-Taking (IMPORT)

£33.00
sold out

This game is Japanese but is language-independent and English rules are provided as PDF's if they are not within the box.

In Quattro Trick-Taking, players lay their cards into shared tricks as in a normal trick-taking game, but each player has a different bidding method for scoring, so you're not necessarily fighting over the same cards throughout the round. A four-player game lasts four rounds, and in each round you'll use a different method for bidding. You can take colored chips to indicate the color of the winning card that you'll play in a trick, or you can indicate the sum of the cards that you'll collect over the entire hand. You can indicate which colors and/or ranks (even or odd) you will not use to win tricks, or you'll choose condition cards that you think you'll satisfy during the hand, such as taking two 7s or winning a trick with a 4-6, with you scoring only if you satisfy all of the chosen conditions. The deck consists of four suits, each numbered 1-12, with red always being the trump suit. Standard trick-taking rules apply, with players needing to follow suit, if possible, so the tricky part of the game is navigating the different goals that your fellow players have set for themselves and ensuring that you satisfy your bid.

Get notified by email when this product is in stock.
Add To Cart

This game is Japanese but is language-independent and English rules are provided as PDF's if they are not within the box.

In Quattro Trick-Taking, players lay their cards into shared tricks as in a normal trick-taking game, but each player has a different bidding method for scoring, so you're not necessarily fighting over the same cards throughout the round. A four-player game lasts four rounds, and in each round you'll use a different method for bidding. You can take colored chips to indicate the color of the winning card that you'll play in a trick, or you can indicate the sum of the cards that you'll collect over the entire hand. You can indicate which colors and/or ranks (even or odd) you will not use to win tricks, or you'll choose condition cards that you think you'll satisfy during the hand, such as taking two 7s or winning a trick with a 4-6, with you scoring only if you satisfy all of the chosen conditions. The deck consists of four suits, each numbered 1-12, with red always being the trump suit. Standard trick-taking rules apply, with players needing to follow suit, if possible, so the tricky part of the game is navigating the different goals that your fellow players have set for themselves and ensuring that you satisfy your bid.

This game is Japanese but is language-independent and English rules are provided as PDF's if they are not within the box.

In Quattro Trick-Taking, players lay their cards into shared tricks as in a normal trick-taking game, but each player has a different bidding method for scoring, so you're not necessarily fighting over the same cards throughout the round. A four-player game lasts four rounds, and in each round you'll use a different method for bidding. You can take colored chips to indicate the color of the winning card that you'll play in a trick, or you can indicate the sum of the cards that you'll collect over the entire hand. You can indicate which colors and/or ranks (even or odd) you will not use to win tricks, or you'll choose condition cards that you think you'll satisfy during the hand, such as taking two 7s or winning a trick with a 4-6, with you scoring only if you satisfy all of the chosen conditions. The deck consists of four suits, each numbered 1-12, with red always being the trump suit. Standard trick-taking rules apply, with players needing to follow suit, if possible, so the tricky part of the game is navigating the different goals that your fellow players have set for themselves and ensuring that you satisfy your bid.

Registered Address:
Bendy Ltd
71-75 Shelton Street
London
WC2H 9JQ

VAT No: 444 4968 62

Registered in England and Wales.

Company Reg No: 14865387


Info:

About Us

Contact us

Shipping & Returns

FAQ’s

Privacy and Cookie Policy

Terms and Conditions

Email:
BendyLtd@gmail.com

Phone: 07706 605190