how to play donkey cards

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و ن و أ م ل عا ل أ عاب ل أ ن م رة ش ت ن م ورق ة ب ع ل! ي ه ر. كث و أ أ صان خ ش ها عب ي ورأق لأ أ 0-9 ب ح ش أ2 ب ح ش أ4 حاة م م ون ل ل !ر أ ث/ ي ع ت اع ألدور أرج ألدور ي و ف ت[ عدل] وأن للأ أ ر م ح أ ر ض خ أ رق أر ر صف أ

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How to Play Donkey Cards

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Page 1: How to Play Donkey Cards

هي لعبة ورق منتشرة من أونو ألعاب العالم يلعبها شخصان أو أكثر.

األوراق

0-9 2اسحب 4اسحبممحاةتغيير اللونارجاع الدورتفويت الدور

االلوان[عدل]

احمراخضرازرقاصفر

2اسحب [عدل]

2اسحب  ورقة  فيسحب خصمه ورقتان اال إذا كان عند الخصم2اسحب  ورقة اذا القى االعب وهكذا.4فاذا اراد يلقيها ليسحب االعب

4اسحب [عدل]

4 اوراق اال إذا كان عند الخصم ورقة اسحب 4 فيسحب خصمه 4اسحب  ورقة اذا القى االعب ويمكنه أيضا ان يلقيها على ورقة اللون وهكذا ويمكنه تغيير8فاذا اراد يلقيها ليسحب االعب

.2 أقوى من اسحب 4 الن اسحب 4 على اسحب 2 لكن ال يمكن ان يلقي ورقة اسحب 2اسحب

Page 2: How to Play Donkey Cards

ممحاة[عدل]

وسحب من قبل االعب الخصم فيلقيها ليمحي السحابة ويمكنه ممحاة اذا كان لدى االعبو الممحاة في االصل ليست من اللعبة االصلية. اللون تغيير

ارجاع الدور[عدل]

العبين

يلقي االعب الورقة ويلعب مرة أخرى.

أكثر من العبين

يلقي االعب الورقة فيرجع الدور إلى الالعب الذي القى الورقة األخيرة.تفويت الدور[عدل]

العبين

يلقي االعب الورقة ويلعب مرة أخرى.

أكثر من العبين

يلقي االعب الورقة فيفوت دور الالعب الذي بعده.تغيير اللون[عدل]

يمكن بها تغيير اللونطريقة اللعب[عدل]

اوراق وتفتح في الوسط ورقة مكشوفة ويجب القاء نفس لون أو رقم الورقة7يوزع لكل العب واذا لم يوجد فيسحب ورقة من السحابة ويجب قول اونو قبل القاء الورقة القبل أخيرة واال

حيث ان طريقة الفوز بنفاد كل اوراق الالعب.2فيسحب مصادر[عدل]

كتيب قوانين لعبة اون

Page 3: How to Play Donkey Cards

Uno (from Italian and Spanish for 'one') is an American card game which is played with a specially printed deck (see Mau Mau for an almost identical game played with normal playing cards). The game was originally developed in 1971 by Merle Robbins in Reading, Ohio, a suburb ofCincinnati. It has been a Mattel product since 1992. The game's general principles put it into the Crazy Eights family of card games.

Card and Deck Styles

The new Uno action cards bear symbols which denote their action, except for the Wild cards which still bear the word "Wild." Before the design change, such cards in English versions of the game bear letters. Especially old English versions can be denoted by the absence of the white rim that surrounds the edge of most Uno cards. Other versions also use symbols and images in both old and new designs, especially those with Wild cards that do not bear the word "Wild" in 40th Anniversary sets. The Xbox 360 version of the game uses the new English style of the cards in gameplay. There are also language-free versions of the newer styles Uno action cards that do not bear the word "Wild" but have the same styling.

Similar games

Uno is a member of the shedding family of card games. The shedding family of card games consists of games where the objective is to get rid of all your cards while preventing the other players from getting rid of their cards.

Strategies

A basic strategy involves playing the legal card with the highest point value. This is a simple way to minimize points held in the hand at the end of the round, but fails to account for the utility of holding wilds and draw fours near the end of the game. Playing a 0 is more likely to prevent the color from changing than playing any other card of a given color, since the deck contains only one 0 card of each color (instead of two for values 1-9 and action cards).

Little has been published on the optimal strategy for the Uno game.

Simulations of Uno games may shed some light on the matter, but the game solution is likely to be very complex. This is because attempts to reduce point count in the player's hands can be "read" by other players if too transparent. This information can be exploited by other players, and it follows that a mixed strategy may be more appropriate.

Some work has been done into the psychology of Uno as it relates to individual and group behavior.[2] Players may exhibit physical tells,[3] in which a subtle, often repeated, visual cue inadvertently reveals their state of mind during a game. Alternatively, they may change their playing style; switching from an aggressive card-shedding strategy to a more subdued one, or vice-versa.

Page 4: How to Play Donkey Cards

How to Play Donkey CardsDonkey is a simple game that children enjoy and can be played with a standard deck of cards. It is best to use a special Donkey card deck though because kids like to identify the animals. Special decks are often called something else or feature a different animal but the rules stay the same. Any deck of cards that has four of each suit can be used. Play can proceed quickly and kids love secretive when winning. Just listen for the stifled giggles to see who has won the game.

Instructions

1.

o 1

Play with three to six players.

o 2

Collect a set of four matching cards for each player. This could be several sets of fours featuring animals, numbers or shapes or sets of four from a standard deck. For example, a game with four players could use four Kings, four Queens, four Jacks and four Aces for play.

o

o 3

Shuffle the cards and deal four cards face down to each player.

o 4

Review the cards within your hand and determine which one card you want to discard. If you have two or three of a kind such as two Jacks, it is wise to discard one of the other cards. If you have one card of each suit, make your best guess for what card value you want to collect.

o 5

Discard your card and place it in front of the person to your left.

Page 5: How to Play Donkey Cards

o 6

Pick up the card that has been placed in front of you by the player on your right. Keep it if it helps you but discard another card on the next turn.

o 7

Lay down your four of a kind once you have collected it as quietly as possible. You have won. Don't let anyone know you have laid down your cards. The other players need to react by laying their cards down quickly, completed or not. The last person to lay their cards down is the "Donkey."

o 8

Reshuffle and play again until everyone has been the Donkey.

Tips & Warnings A similar version of this game is called Pig. Instead of laying your cards down

quietly, a finger is laid aside your nose indicating that you have your four of a kind. The last person to notice and react is called the "Pig."

Don't let kids be mean to each other as they call each other names. This silly game is meant to be fun.

How to Call a DonkeyIn the popular card game of poker, players range from the skilled sharks to the passionate but strategy-less donkeys. In poker, a "donkey" is an unskilled player. They are also often identified as a "fish" or a "donk." The term is not endearing; calling a player a "donkey" is derogatory and meant to insult or intimidate. Because the donkey's inexperience and boldness make him somewhat of a wildcard, the experienced poker player would do well to acknowledge such an opponent with caution. Poker players face an increasing number of "donkeys," partially due to the advent of online poker and the glamorizing of online poker tournaments. Despite their inexperience, donkeys often upset the game because of their non-traditional, erratic play-style.

Page 6: How to Play Donkey Cards
Page 7: How to Play Donkey Cards

Long before there were televisions, DVDs, computers, internet, video games and text messaging, families and friends used to sit together at the dining room table laughing and playing card games that challenged their skills and wit.   Well, those days are back!  Put your iPhones down because you’ll need both hands to play this fast-paced, action-packed, duel-of-wits card game!  Take a trip into the past and find yourself reunited around the  table once again…where friends become family… and family become friends.

The game may be over in the blink of an eye, but the memories will last a lifetime.

DONKEY!   The only game that’s as much fun to lose as it is to win!

Page 8: How to Play Donkey Cards

TOURNAMENT PLAY

If you own a game of Donkey™, then you know you’ve potentially got a party in a box!   In fact you’re probably being invited to a lot of parties lately and the host is probably reminding you to bring your game along.  Imagine two, three or four tables all playing Donkey™ at the same time!  At one party we had six tables all playing at once!  The neighbor was as mad as a rabid dog and foaming at the mouth when he came over to complain about the noise, but since we were a man short at one of the tables, we sat him down in the empty seat, dealt him a hand and warned him of the ferocity of the other players if he got any froth on the pucks.  He’s been hooked ever since.

Rules for Hosting a Donkey™ Tournament:

1. For starters, make sure you have a separate Donkey™ game for each group of six to eight players.

2. Be creative and go with a theme for the evening:  Crazy Hats or Wild Ties. Your guests will be laughing before they even get in the door.

3. Feed your guests ample food and water.  Nothing spoils a Donkey™ tournament like eight ravenous, blood-thirsty vultures afraid to walk over to the chips and dip table for fear they’ll miss a puck.

4. Distribute your players evenly, six to eight per table.  Save a place for the neighbor. 5. Each table plays according to the original Donkey™ instructions.   When all tables have narrowed

their players down to two semifinalists, wipe up the spilled drinks from one of the tables and chairs, and seat all of the semifinalists at the clean table.

6. The semifinalists will now play a game of single elimination (or cut-throat) Donkey™.  There are no words to spell in the final round and the kicker cards are set aside.   All semifinalists will be saving for a four-of-a-kind.  Choose a dealer any way you wish and place the pucks on the table accordingly (one less puck than there are players).  When the first deal begins, the semifinalists may not speak to any of the Donkeys from the previous game.

7. Once a semifinalist misses a puck or is called out on a technicality, he must announce his fate (he is a Donkey!).  Any remaining player who speaks to this Donkey or any of the Donkeys from the original tournament tables will automatically become a Donkey, too.   (The semifinalists will drop like flies!)

8. The final two players face off for a duel with one puck between them.  The dealer shuffles the cards.  His opponent cuts the deck in half.  The dealer chooses his half and his opponent takes

Page 9: How to Play Donkey Cards

the other half.  Each player deals his opponent four cards and places the remainder of his cards in front of himself.   When the dealer says “go” both players play off of their own stack of cards, discarding to their left.   If a player runs out of cards, he draws from the discard pile of his opponent.

9. Only one player will get the puck and win the tournament.  All other players are a just a bunch of ……. Donkeys!   The winner of the tournament is exempt from having to help clean up the mess.    When the games have been picked up and put back in their boxes, set a date for your next tournament and invite your neighbor; he’s been a good sport.

QUESTIONS ABOUT TOURNAMENT PLAY:

1. Our table is narrowed down to the final two, but the other tables are still playing.  May we talk to the donkeys until the Final Play begins?

Yes, this is a good time to make friends with the Donkeys at your table again; they’ll be the ones cheering you on in the Finals.  When the dealer at the Finals Table deals the first card, that’s your cue to stop speaking to the herds of Donkeys that will by now have surrounded you … back side facing in, and one foot ready to punch.

2. Can a donkey that lost in the first game get put into the semifinals?

Yes, if the neighbor’s wife comes over and drags him home because he promised he would be right back and it’s been two hours, someone may take his place in the Finals.

Page 10: How to Play Donkey Cards

 

The Origin of Donkey

Page 11: How to Play Donkey Cards

 

When the Cleveland Kids were growing up, the long summer days were spent playing outdoor games, the majority of which we made up.  Most of the games were derived from games we’d played the summer before but had either lost or broken the parts to.

Broomball, much like baseball, was played in the street, but after losing the bat one year we substituted the broom, hitting the ball with the straw end.  The object was to hit the ball and run to the Dolahan’s mailbox and back for a home run.  Throwing the baseball at the runner was perfectly within the rules so you had to zigzag your way back to home base if you wanted to arrive with all your body parts intact.

After we broke the last Croquet mallet using it for a hammer to build a fort, we invented a game called “Snook in the Grass.”  This was played by crawling on your belly in the grass, using the large end of a pool cue to hit the Croquet balls through the wickets, which were placed strategically in 6 locations, much like  the pockets on a pool table.  You had to remain where you were in the grass after you hit the ball, then toss the cue to the next player and hope that he didn’t have a bad aim, or a worse attitude.  This game came to an end the summer we used the wooden balls to play Broomball because we’d lost the actual baseball.  The Croquet balls broke apart when they hit the pavement, which was probably a good thing because someone would have suffered permanent damage by taking one in the back.

When the days got short and the weather turned cold, we needed a good indoor game to keep 7 kids age 4 to 15, busy indoors.  Fortunately for us, our mother had an incredible imagination and could make a board game out of a Brussels Sprout and two clothespins.   She was the one who taught us the basics of the game “DONKEY.”  She changed the rules randomly to keep it interesting and to keep us out of her hair while she studied to take her nursing exam.  Before long we were making up our own rules, some of which involved sling shots and BB guns.  Clearly we still needed her guiding wisdom if we were to survive adolescence.

The years flew by in the flick of a Donkey’s tail and the list of “DONKEY” fans grew and grew until people started suggesting that maybe we should share this game with the rest of the world.  “That’s a great idea!” we said, and let another 10 years pass while we waited for a sign that the time was right.

Page 12: How to Play Donkey Cards

Then one Fall day in 2010, our brother, Cleve (Yes, that’s his real name…Cleve Cleveland.  I believe I’ve already mentioned how creative our mother was and by the time her 4th son was born she didn’t want to miss what might be the last opportunity to use this “Clever” name.  Little did she know that 3 more sons would follow and she could have held onto it a little bit longer)  So there was Cleve, taking a scenic drive in the Nevada desert one Fall day when he sees what he thinks is a herd of wild horses coming across the plain.  He pulls his car over to the side of the road and gets out to take pictures and as they come closer he realizes that they’re not horses at all…he is looking at a herd of WILD DONKEYS!  And before he knows it, he is surrounded by these adorable little beggars who stick their noses inside his car and inside his pockets searching for anything edible, including lint.

“It’s a sign!” he calls out.   But no one can hear him because he doesn’t have enough bars on his phone and the call doesn’t go through.  As soon as he got back into town though, he called my sister and me and said, “It’s time.”  And the rest is history.

We now present to you, the game of “DONKEY” It’s a Kick!

We are the Cleveland Kids;  Dedicated to the design of safe, enjoyable board games and to the rebirth of family game night where laughter and good conversation bridge the gap between generations.

 

The Donkey Jingle 

The instructions on a Kicker Card explain how you can win;

Build a barn with just four playing cards,

Grab a puck with just your chin.

But better watch the action close 'cuz I know without a doubt,

That the pucks will soon be flying

And if you're the one left out...

Page 13: How to Play Donkey Cards

You'll add a letter to your score, and when they total six,

You become a full fledged Donkey,

That's when Donkey really kicks!

Oh, the cards race by, the pucks will fly, your head will soon be spinning

'Cuz losing at this crazy game is alot more fun than winning! 

When your friends call you a "Donkey",  flash your teeth like you might bite

Just give a buck, and swish your tail,

And say, "You got that right!"

You're  officially a Donkey now you know what you must do;

Announce yourself, remove a puck,

No one can talk to you.

But, if a fellow player slips and calls you by your name,

They're officially a Donkey too,

That's how you play the game,

Oh, the cards race by, the pucks will fly, your head will soon be spinning

'Cuz losing at this crazy game is alot more fun than winning!