| Net Poker Spades | ||
| 1. Purpose of the game | ||
| To be the first to score 500 points (800 is option) or over accumulated over several deals. Points are scored mainly for tricks taking during the play. Two players use a standard 52 card pack. Cards rank A(high), K, Q, J, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2(low). | ||
| 2. Deal | ||
| You can choose any of two variants of the beginning: | ||
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| 3. Bidding | ||
| Each opponent must make a bid, which is the number of tricks they expect to take, out of the total possible number of 13 tricks. It is important to realize that in Spades both players' bids stand (it is not like other bidding games in which only the higher bid counts). Each player may choose nil. | ||
| 3. Hand Rankings | ||
| Poker is played with a standard 4-suit 52-card deck. The ace normally plays high, but can sometimes play low, as explained below. At the showdown, those players still remaining compare their hands according to the following rankings: | ||
| 4. Play of the cards | ||
| The first trick depends on variant of the game: | ||
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The player who won the first trick leads to the next. Any card except a spade may be led (exept the third variant of the first trick). Each player must follow suit if able; if unable to follow suit, the player may play any card. A trick containing a spade is won by the highest spade played; if no spade is played, the trick is won by the highest card of the suit led. The player who wins a trick leads to the next. Spades may not be led until either | ||
| Playing the first spade is known as "breaking" spades. | ||
| 5. Scoring | ||
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| More Rules | ||
| You can find Poker rules on the John McLeod page "Rules of Card Games: Spades". This is a very comprehensive library of the rules of hundreds of card games on the Web. | ||