WHIST
Whist was played widely in the 18th and 19th centuries. Whist was derived from the older game Ruff and Honors, and in the twentieth century, the game of Bridge has displaced Whist as the most popular card game internationally among serious card players. Nevertheless, Whist continues to be played in Britain, often in local tournaments called Whist Drives.
Whist Rules
The classic game of Whist is a plain-trick
game without bidding for four players in fixed partnerships. Although the rules are
extremely simple there is enormous scope for scientific play, and at its greatest
popularity a large amount of literature about how to play Whist was written.
Players
There are four players in two fixed partnerships.
Partners sit facing each other. The game is played clockwise.
Cards
A standard 52 card pack is used. The cards
in each suit rank from highest to lowest: A K Q J 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2.
Deal
The cards are shuffled by the player to dealer's
left and cut by the player to dealer's right. The dealer deals out all the cards
one at a time so that each player has 13. The final card, which will belong to the
dealer, is turned face up to indicate which suit is trumps. The turned trump remains
face up on the table until it is dealer's turn to play to the first trick.
It is traditional to use two packs of cards.
During each deal, the dealer's partner shuffles the other pack and places it to the
right. The dealer for the next hand then simply needs to pick up the cards from the
left and pass them across to the right to be cut. Provided all the players understand
and operate it, this procedure saves time and helps to remember whose turn it is
to deal, as the spare pack of cards is always to the left of the next dealer.
Play
The player to the dealer's left leads to the
first trick. Any card may be led. The other players, in clockwise order, each play
a card to the trick. Players must follow suit by playing a card of the same suit
as the card led if they can; a player with no card of the suit led may play any card.
The trick is won by the highest trump in it, or if it contains no trump, by the highest
card of the suit led. The winner of a trick leads to the next.
Scoring
When all 13 tricks have been played, the side
which won more tricks scores 1 point for each trick they won in excess of 6. The
partnership which first reaches 5 points wins the game. This will normally take several
deals.
Variations
Honors
Honors are the top four trumps: Ace King Queen
Jack. A partnership, which between them held all four honors in their hands, scores
an extra 4 points, which they claim at the end of the play. A side which held three
of the four honors can claim 2 points for them. A team which at the start of the
already has 4 points towards the 5 required for game cannot score honors on that
deal.
If on the same deal one side scores for tricks and the other side scores honors, the tricks are scored first. That means that if both sides would have reached 5 or more points, it is the side scoring for tricks that wins the game.
Although scoring honors was part of the traditional
game, nowadays many players do not count them. Scoring for honors introduces a larger
luck element into the game.
Determination of Trumps
Instead of determining trumps by facing the last card in the deal, an alternative is to fix the trump suit in advance. In this case it is normal to go through the trump suits in a fixed sequence. For the first deal Hearts are trumps, for the second deal Diamonds, then Spades, then Clubs, then Hearts again, and so on. This method is commonly used in tournaments, such as Whist drives.
It is also possible to introduce no trumps into the sequence so that every fifth hand is played without trumps.
Scoring
The number of points required for game varies.
In America a target of 7 was customary. In Britain the game was 5 points up, but
it was usual to play a rubber which was the best of three games, that is, the winners
were the first side to win two games. There was also Long Whist in which game was
9 points.
When playing a tournament, it is inconvenient
to have people at different tables play varying numbers of deals before moving. Therefore
it is usual to play a fixed number of deals, rather than a game. Each player's score
is the total number of odd tricks (tricks above six) that their side has taken over
the deals played.
There are other types of Whist, which have gained national popularity within a country and the rules have been varied to accommodate the players. Below are links to these variations. These links may change over time and there is no guarantee that they are valid at this time.
Bid Whist: A partnership game with bidding, played mainly in the United States.
Color Whist or Kleurwiezen: A game similar to Solo Whist, played mainly in Belgium.
German Whist: A two-player adaptation of Whist without bidding, played mainly in the United Kingdom.
Israeli Whist: A game in which a player tries to bid the exact number of tricks one will take.
Knockout Whist: A game in which a player who wins no trick is eliminated.
Minnesota
Whist: A game in which there are no trumps, and hands can be played to win tricks or to lose tricks and is a very similar game of Norwegian Whist.
Romanian Whist: A game in which players try to predict the exact number of tricks they will take.
Solo Whist: A game played in England, where individuals can bid to win 5, 9 or 13 tricks or to lose every trick.