Lying Shit (Valepaska)

Number of decks: 1
Number of cards in the deck: 52
Number of players: 3 - 5
The seniority of the cards: 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, B, D, K, T.
Purpose of the game: not to be the last player with cards on hand.
Rules of the game. Valepaska is a Finnish card game, with a literal translation into Russian "lying shit". The game is based on a bluff, since all players play cards in closed form. They can tell the truth or lie. They usually play from three to five players inclusive with a standard deck of 52 cards. The first handler is determined by the draw, in the next games the players dealt cards in turn clockwise. The deck is carefully worn by the handler and each player is dealt 5 cards each, and the remaining deck is placed in the center of the table in a closed form. Next, players look at their cards and the player who says that he has a triple or a few triples, goes first, putting one or more triples in the center of the table in a closed form. Then the turn moves to the next player clockwise, which can put as many cards as it wants, if they are all of the same value or older in value than the card or cards put by the previous player. The player puts his cards or card in a closed form, but must tell all players that the card or card is of the same value or that the cards are of the highest value. You can not play jacks, queens or kings, if the previous player played seven or lower value cards, you can not play with aces if the previous card was jack, lady or king, or there were no cards in the reset. Some cards have a special significance in the game.
Ten. If one or several dozen are laid out, then cards that have been laid out to ten are put aside in a closed form and do not take part in the game. If you play a dozen, then the next player can only play other cards, but not the ten.
Ace. Aces behave just like dozens and can only be put on a jack, a lady or a king, or when there are no cards on the table.
Two. Two can be played on top of any card or when there are no cards on the table. If the previous card was a deuce, then only two can be put on a deuce.

Since players put cards on the table in a closed form, then some players may have doubts about what cards the player actually put. Therefore, the doubting player can open the cards of the player who was the last player and if the move was wrong, then the player who resembled them takes all the cards from the table to himself, and the move moves to the next player clockwise, if the move was correct, then the player who Doubted and opened the cards, takes all the cards of the dump to himself and the move goes to the next player clockwise. Thus, the game goes on until there is only one player with cards on hand. This player is considered a loser and is called paskahousu, which in Finnish means "a man with shit in his pants".