Summary of Crazy Eights
- What card game to play for 5 people?
- What games can five people play?
- What card game is played with 5 cards?
- How to play spades with 5 people?
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Great 5-person card games using a standard deck include trick-taking games like Oh Hell!, party games like President/Palace, and complex partnership games like Sheepshead, while modern options are Sushi Go!, The Crew, or Love Letter, offering everything from simple fun to deep strategy. You can also adapt games like Spades or play rummy variations.
Traditional Deck Games (Standard 52-Card Deck)
President
(or Palace/Asshole):
A climbing game where players try to get rid of cards, moving up a social hierarchy
.
Oh Hell! (or Wizard/Bidding Spades): A trick-taking game where players bid exactly how many tricks they think they’ll take.
Sheepshead: A complex partnership game popular in the Midwest, excellent for 5 players.
Hearts: Can be played with 5 by dealing 10 cards and setting two aside, or having players sit out rounds.
Egyptian Ratscrew: A fast-paced, slap-based game for quick reactions.
Kemps (or Signal): A partnership game requiring secret signals between teammates.
Rummy Variations: Games like 10-Card Rummy can be adapted by dealing 6 cards each.
This video explains how to play the traditional card game of Spades:
57s
Gather Together Games
YouTube • Nov 22, 2022
Modern Card Games (Often Require Specific Decks)
Sushi Go!: A fast, drafting game about collecting delicious sushi dishes.
The Crew: The Quest for Planet Nine: A cooperative trick-taking game with unique missions.
Love Letter: A micro-game of deduction and luck, often with themed versions like Infinity Gauntlet.
Point Salad: A light game about collecting vegetable cards to score points.
Forest Shuffle / Parks / Meadow: Beautifully themed games with card-driven gameplay.
This video provides a review of the game Deckscape in Wonderland:
58s
Don’t Be Board
YouTube • Feb 9, 2025
Tips for 5 Players
Partnerships: For games like Sheepshead, players form temporary alliances.
Rotation: Some games like Hearts involve rotating players or sitting out a hand.
Table Size: Be mindful that some games, like Glory to Rome, need a decent table for 5 players.
5-player card game using traditional deck of cards? – BoardGameGeek
@Scott Firestone IV. Mar 15, 2006. This is one of my favorites using a regular deck. http://www.boardgamegeek.com/game/1116. Tip. …
BoardGameGeek
The Best 5-Person Card Games for All Ages – wikiHow
What’s a good card game for 5 people? Game expert Triple S Games recommends card games like Crazy Eights, Egyptian Rat Slap, and C…
wikiHow
Casual, easy to learn card game for 4-5 players – BoardGameGeek
+1 for Sushi Go! , Point Salad , Love Letter , Port Royal , The Crew: The Quest for Planet Nine – all of these work great with 5. …
BoardGameGeek
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Crazy Eights is a shedding-type card game for two to seven players and the best known American member of the Eights Group which also includes Pig and Spoons. The object of the game is to be the first player to discard all of their cards. The game is similar to Switch, Mau-Mau or Whot!.[1]
Originally this was played primarily by children with the left over cards not used in Euchre. Now a standard 52-card deck is used when there are five or fewer players. When there are more than five players, two decks are shuffled together and all 104 cards are used.
Origins[edit]The game first appeared as Eights in the 1930s,[1] and the name Crazy Eights dates to the 1940s, derived from the United States military designation for discharge of mentally unstable soldiers, Section 8.[2][3] It may have derived from the German game of Mau-Mau.
There are many variations of the basic game, under names including Craits, Last card, and Switch. Bartok, Mao, Taki, and Uno add further elements to the game.
David Parlett describes Crazy Eights as “not so much a game as a basic pattern of play on which a wide variety of changes can be rung,” noting that players can easily invent and explore new rules.[1]
Basic play[edit]Five cards are dealt to each player (or seven in a two-player game).[4] The remaining cards of the deck are placed face down at the center of the table as the stock pile. The top card is then turned face up to start the game as the first card in the discard pile.
Players discard by matching rank or suit with the top card of the discard pile, starting with the player left of the dealer. They can also play any 8 at any time, which allows them to declare the suit that the next player is to play; that player must then follow the named suit or play another 8. If a player is unable to play, that player draws cards from the stock pile until a play can be made, or until the stock pile is exhausted. If the player cannot play when the stock pile is exhausted, that player must pass the turn to the player on the left. Other variations have players limit the maximum number of cards drawn. A player may draw from the stock pile at any time, even when holding one or more playable cards.[5]
As an example: If the top card on the discard pile is 6♣, the next player can:
- play any 6 (i.e. 6♦, 6♥ or 6♠)
- play any club
- play any 8, then declare a new suit
- draw from the stockpile until a play can be made
If the stock pile runs out, all played cards except for the top one are reshuffled to form a new stock.[4]
The game ends as soon as one player has emptied their hand. That player collects a payment from each opponent equal to the point score of the cards remaining in that opponent’s hand. 8s score 50, court cards 10 and all other cards face value. If the players run out of cards in the deck, the player with the lowest point score in their hand scores the difference between that hand and each opponent’s hand.[1]
The winner of the game is the first player to reach a specific number of points. The number of points needed to win is calculated by multiplying the number of players by 50. So, for two players it is 100 points, three players 150, four 200, five 250, six 300 and for seven players 350.
Variations[edit]Card game historian John McLeod describes Crazy Eights as “one of the easiest games to modify by adding variations”,[4] and many variant rules exist. Common rules applied to cards include:
- Queens skip
- Playing a Queen causes the next player to miss their turn.[4]
- Aces reverse direction
- Playing an Ace reverses the direction of play.[4]
- Draw 2
- Playing a two forces the next player to draw two cards, unless they can play another two. Multiple twos “stack”; if a two is played in response to a two, the next player must draw four.[4]
If the game ends on a special card, that card’s rule is not applied.[4]
A popular variant of the game in the United States is Crazy Eights Countdown, where players start with a score of 8. A player’s score determines how many cards they are dealt at the start of each round, and which rank of card is wild for them. (So initially, all players are dealt eight cards and 8s are wild for everyone; after one round, one player will be dealt seven cards and 7s will be wild for them, but 8s will be wild for everyone else.) The first player to reduce their score to zero wins the game.[4]
See also[edit]- Craits
- Uno (card game)
- Switch (card game)
- Mau Mau (card game)
- Macau (card game)
- Taki (card game)
- Whot!
- Yaniv
- ^ a b c d Parlett, David (1996). Oxford Dictionary of Card Games. Oxford University Press. p. 291. ISBN 0-19-869173-4.
- ^ Rauf, Don (2013). Simple rules for card games : instructions and strategy for twenty card games (1st ed.). New York: Potter Style. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-7704-3385-7.
- ^ Rome, Ben H.; Hussey, Chris (2013). Games’ most wanted : the top 10 book of players, pawns, and power-ups (1st ed.). University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-1-59797-723-4.
- ^ a b c d e f g h “Crazy Eights – Card Game Rules”. www.pagat.com.
- ^ “How to Play Crazy Eights,” Bicycle, 2020, https://bicyclecards.com/how-to-play/crazy-eights/#:~:text=If%20unable%20to%20play%2C%20cards,exhausted%2C%20the%20player%20must%20pass.&text=That%20is%2C%20an%20eight%20may,(but%20never%20a%20number).