Okinawa

Number of decks: 1
Number of cards in the deck: 52
Number of players: 4 (two by two)
The seniority of the cards: 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, B, D, K, T.
Purpose of the game: to get the most points.
Rules of the game. The game originated among the US military of World War II, apparently during the military operations on the Japanese island of Okinawa, in honor of which the name of this game appeared. Play as a couple of four pair. Players of one pair sit opposite each other, so that to the left and right of each player are his rivals. The first deliverer is determined by lot, and in the next games the player of the losing pair gives up. The deck is carefully packed, it must be removed and each player is dealt 5 cards each. The remaining deck is placed in the center of the table in a closed form. After that, players look at their cards and starting with the player to the left of the deliverer are in turn announced from what amount of bribes the pair can take. Each subsequent announcement must be greater than the previous one. A pair of players that wins, declares a trump suit. Then new announcements begin and if the rivals announce that they will take more bribes, then pairs of players continue to make announcements until the winner is identified. Next, the first move is made by a pair of players who won the ads. A player of this pair can go from any card, every next player clockwise must put a card of the same suit, if there is no card of that color, then he can put a card of any suit. After each player has put on the card, the players determine who gets the laid out cards (bribe), and they will get to the one who put the high card in the suit of the first move, or who put the trump card, or if there are 2 trumps, then the one who posted the senior Trump. This player also owns the right to draw the next bribe. Thus, players play 5 bribes, after that the handler takes the remaining deck with cards and gives each player 8 cards. The first player who took the last bribe. So, all the bribes are played out, after which the players count the points for taking bribes. For each taken bribe from the taken announced number of bribes, players receive 5 points each. For each additional bribe taken, the team receives one point each. However, if the team took less bribes than committed to take, the team loses 5 points for each bribe, which it set, for example, undertook to take 5 bribes, and took 4, so the team loses 25 points. Any team in the process of announcing the amount of bribes that it could take could declare "Okinawa" which means that the team will take all the bribes and if the team did it, then it is charged 5 points for the bribe and 50 extra points. If the team did not take all the bribes, then it loses 5 points for each bribe "Okinawa" and 50 bonus points. The team that wins the set number of points wins. Usually play up to 300 or more points.