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词条 Viennese Rummy
释义

  1. General

  2. Cards

  3. Rules

      Card values  

  4. Play

  5. Ending

  6. Rubber

  7. See also

  8. References

  9. Literature

  10. External links

{{Infobox CardGame
| title = Viennese Rummy
| subtitle = Wiener Rummy
| image_link = File:70071 Roe FS.jpg
| image_caption = A pack of 110 Rummy cards
| alt_names =
| type = Matching
| players = 2-6
| ages = All
| num_cards = 2 x 52 + 2 Jokers
| deck = French
| play = Clockwise
| card_rank = A K Q J 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 (A)
| origin =Germany
| related = Rummy
| playing_time = 6-8 minutes/hand
| random_chance = Medium
| skills =
| footnotes =
}}

Viennese Rummy ({{lang-de|Wiener Rummy}}) is a matching card game of the Rummy family for 2-6 people played in continental Europe.

General

Unlike German Rummy, sets and runs of cards are not melded but collected in the player's hand until he is able either to declare "Rummy" and lay his hand on the table or to "knock" (klopfen) and meld all cards except for low-scoring 'deadwood'. Hence its other name of Rummy without Melding (Rommé ohne Auslegen).

Cards

Viennese Rummy is played with two packs of French playing cards of 52 cards and one joker each, making a total of 106 cards. It is suitable for two to six players. Each player is dealt ten cards, except for the dealer who receives eleven.[1]

Rules

Like German Rummy, there are no standardised rules for Viennese Rummy. In fact a raft of almost identical games go under very different names including 101 Rummy and Elimination Rummy. Knock Rummy is a generic name for rummy games where players only reveal their hand at the end of the game. Another very special variant for two people is the popular Gin Rummy.[1]

The following rules are therefore not to be regarded as binding in the sense of chess rules. Unless otherwise stated, the rules of the game are the same as those for German Rummy.[1]

Card values

The card values are as follows:[2]

  • Joker - 20 points
  • Ace (Ass) - 11 points
  • Court cards – K, Q, J – 10 points each
  • Pip cards – 2 to 10 – score their value in pips

Play

Players now try to improve their hand by drawing and discarding cards, as they do in German Rummy.

Ending

A game continues until one player calls "Rummy" (Rommé), melds ten cards and discards the eleventh. The other players then lay out their cards and count them up as in Gin Rummy, by summing their deadwood, i.e. those that cannot be placed into sets or runs.[1]

The game can also be ended by "knocking" (klopfen): if a player has only five or fewer card points in deadwood (cards left unmelded in the hand[3]

), he can knock. He then reveals his hand as in a rummy call and announces his deadwood score. The other players do the same, but unlike a rummy call, they can try to improve their hand by drawing and discarding a card if they knock. They may not touch other players' cards.[1]

Rubber

Viennese Rummy is usually played in 'rubbers'. One rubber consists of several individual games. Before a game begins, each player contributes five chips to the pot (Pot or Pulle). After each game, the knocker or rummy caller wins the so-called knock money, i.e. a chip from all other participants still in play. Furthermore, for each player the negative points (Schlechtpunkte) received in this game are noted and added cumulatively.[1]

Once a player has accumulated 101 or more points, they are eliminated; if all but one player is eliminated, the remaining player wins the pot and the game is over.[1]

If a player has already accumulated over 81 but not yet 101 negative points, he may 'buy himself back' into the pot by contributing an additional five chips and reducing his bad point score to that of the second worst player still in play. However, a player may only buy back once during the game.[1]

See also

  • de:Rommé

References

1. ^Online Romme lernen - Romme Infoseite at www.online-romme-lernen.de. Retrieved 1 Jul 2018.
2. ^Knock Rummy (Wiener Rummy) at www.rummy.ch. Retrieved 2 Jul 2018.
3. ^Parlett, David. The Penguin Book of Card Games. London: Penguin (2008), p. 488. {{ISBN|978-0-141-03787-5}}.

Literature

  • Fritz Babsch: Internationale und österreichische Kartenspiel-Regeln, Piatnik, Vienna, 1983
  • Johannes Bamberger: Die beliebtesten Kartenspiele, Verlag Perlen-Reihe, Vol. 648, 21st edition, Vienna 19??
  • Claus D. Grupp: Rommé und Canasta in allen Variationen, Falken-Verlag Niedernhausen/Ts, 1982
  • Rudolf Heinrich [d. i. Rudolf Bretschneider]: Rommé - Rummy international Alle Spielarten, Verlag Perlen-Reihe, Vol. 650, 7th edition, Vienna, 19??
  • John Smith-Creighton: Das Rummyspiel, 3rd edition, Vienna, 1927

External links

  • Knock Rummy (Wiener Rummy) at www.rummy.ch.
  • Räuber-Romme und Wiener Rummy Spielverlauf und Taktik – Kartenspiele für Erwachsene at 123sportwetten.eu.
  • [https://www.deutscherskatverband.de/fileadmin/_migrated/content_uploads/2012-01-07_Richtlinien_Romme_02.pdf Internationale Rommé-Ordnung des DSkV] (International Rommé Rules by German Skat Association). {{Ger}}
  • Rommé Rules of German Rummy at www.spielanleitung.org. {{Ger}}
{{Wiktionary|de:Rommé}}{{cardgames}}

8 : French deck card games|Rummy|Austrian card games|Two-player card games|Three-player card games|Four-player card games|Five-player card games|Six-player card games

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