Card games with two players

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These games typically don’t involve playing cards. the game Spades), while in point-trick games the rank of the cards in taken tricks determines who wins or loses (e.g. In plain-trick games, the objective evolves around the number of tricks won (e.g.

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Game-specific rules determine which cards are allowed to be played and which card wins a trick. Every round (or trick) each player plays one card. These games have multiple players which each have a hand of cards. The most well known example is Spite and Malice (also known as Cat and Mouse) but there are others like Crapette (Russian Bank) or Spit (Speed).

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These opponents could be playing a completely separate game of solitaire on their own (Simultaneous Solitaire) but more often players are allowed to play on each other's cards or there is a shared (part of the) layout. These games are based on the single player traditional solitaire games, but add a competitive element by playing with one or more opponents.

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