Without the use of cell phones, many students have noticed their peers playing games in the cafeteria. Uno is a popular game to see people playing, but there are many others that you can play with a simple deck of cards. Let us know if you have others to add to the list!
Crazy eight
Number of players: 2-4
Standard Number Of Cards 52
How to play: In a two-player game, each player is dealt seven cards. In a game with three or four players, each player is dealt five cards. The rest of the deck goes facedown in a pile, with the top card turned up beside it. This is the discard pile. The player to the left of the dealer discards a card from their hand that matches either the number or suit of the top card in the discard pile. The next player must match their card to the number or suit that the eight was meant to cover. Play continues with players matching the card at the top of the discard pile. The first player to use up all their cards is the winner. If the deck runs out before the game is over, the discard pile can be used.
Go Fish!
Number of players: 2+
Standard deck of 52 cards or a go fish deck.
How to play: Choose a “dealer” to hand out cards. If there are two or three players, each player is dealt seven cards. If there are more people taking part, each player is dealt five cards. The remaining cards are placed face down in a pile. This is the “fish pond.”
Each player sorts their cards into groups of the same number or suit (i.e. group of threes or group of kings), making sure not to show anyone. The “requester” (person to the left of the dealer) starts the game by asking another player for cards that will match their hand. For example, if the requester has two kings, they will ask the other player for kings.
If the other player has these cards, they must hand them over. The requester continues asking the same player for more cards until the player does not have the cards they want. If the player does not have the right cards, they can tell the requester to “Go fish.” The requester then has to take one card from the “fish pond.” The player who told them to “Go fish” becomes the new requester.
Anyone who collects all four cards of a set (i.e. all four eights or all four Queens) puts them face down in front of them. The winner is the first person to have no single cards left, only complete sets. If two people run out of cards together, the player with the most sets wins the game
War
Number of players: 2+
Standard deck of 52 cards
How to play: All cards are dealt to the two players and kept face down. Neither player must look at their cards. Both players turn over the top card of their piles and put them face up in the center of the table, beside the other player’s card. Whoever has turned over the highest-ranking card takes both cards and adds them to the bottom of their pile. This continues until two cards of the same value (i.e. two sevens) are put down together. The game is now in a state of “war.” To continue, both players take two new cards and put one face down on top of the card they have already placed in the middle and one face up. Whoever puts down the higher ranking face-up card wins all six. The game is won by the player who collects all of the cards.
Old Maid
Number of players: 3+
A standard deck of 52 cards is used, but with one queen removed. This leaves a pair of queens in one color and a single queen ( the old maid) in the other color.
How to play: All cards are dealt face down to players. Some players may have more cards than others, but this is okay. Each player sorts their cards into matching pairs of the same number or suit, keeping them hidden from other players. Players holding pairs of matching cards lay them down on the table face up.
If anyone has three matching cards, they only put down one pair and keep the spare card. If anyone has four matching cards, they put down two pairs.
The player to the left of the dealer offers their cards to the player on their left, who cannot see them. That player selects a random card from their hand. If the new card picked up matches any of the cards the player already has, they can put down the pair. If not, they keep it and offer their cards to the player on their left.
This continues until all the cards have been put down in pairs, except the Old Maid, which is left alone and cannot be paired. The person left holding this card is the old maid and loses the game.
Concentration
Number of players: 2+
Two standard decks of 52 cards each
How to play:
Combine decks to make pairs of matching cards. Use any amount of pairs. The more pairs you use, the more challenging it will be!
Shuffle and spread cards face down on a table between the players. Cards can be laid in a random pattern or in a grid. The object of the game is to find matching pairs. Players take turns turning over two cards and letting all the players see them and study them.
If they are not a matching pair, try to remember what and where they are, then turn them back over. The next player turns over two cards. If they are a matching pair, that player removes them from the table and keeps them, and then has another turn.
When all cards have been removed from the table, each player counts up the number of cards they have collected. The player with the most cards wins.