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Revision as of 12:28, 25 December 2018

Hanafuda (花札)
Koi Koi
The start of a game of Koi-Koi
Players2–6
Setup time2 minutes
Playing time10–180 minutes
ChanceMedium
Age range8 and up
SkillsProbabilistic analysis
Strategic thought

Hanafuda (花札) are playing cards of Japanese origin that are used to play a number of games. The name translates to "flower cards".[1][2] The name also refers to games played with the cards.

History

File:Hanafuda b1.jpg
Hanafuda cards

In 1549, the 18th year of Tenbun, the missionary Francis Xavier landed in Japan. The crew of his ship carried a set of 48 Portuguese Hombre playing cards from Europe, and eventually this led to the popularity of card games and gambling in Japan. When Japan subsequently closed off all contact with the Western world in 1633, foreign playing cards were banned.[3]

Despite that prohibition, gambling with cards remained highly popular. Private gambling during the Tokugawa Shogunate was illegal. Because playing with card games per se was not banned, new cards were created with different designs to avoid the restriction. For example, an anonymous game player designed a card game known as Unsun Karuta. These cards were decorated with Chinese art, depicting Chinese warriors, weaponry, armor, and dragons. This deck consisted of 75 cards, and was not as popular as the Western card games had been, simply because of the difficulty of becoming familiar with the system. Each time gambling with a card deck of a particular design became too popular, the government banned those cards, which then prompted the creation of new ones. This cat and mouse game between the government and rebellious gamblers resulted in the creation of many differing designs.

Through the rest of the Edo period through the Meiwa, An'ei, and Tenmei eras (roughly 1765–1788), a game called Mekuri Karuta took the place of Unsun Karuta. Consisting of a 48-card deck divided into four sets of 12, it became wildly popular and was one of the most common forms of gambling during this time period. In fact, it became so commonly used for gambling that it was banned in 1791, during the Kansei era.

Over the next few decades, several new card games were developed and subsequently banned because they were used almost exclusively for gambling purposes. However, the government began to realize that some form of card games would always be played by the populace, and began to relax their laws against gambling. The eventual result of all this was a game called Hanafuda, which combined traditional Japanese games with Western-style playing cards. Because hanafuda do not have numbers (the main purpose is to associate images) and the long length to complete a game, it has a partially limited use for gambling. However, it is still possible to gamble by assigning points for completed image combinations.

By this point, however, card games were not nearly as popular as they had been due to past governmental repression.

In 1889, Fusajiro Yamauchi founded Nintendo Koppai for the purposes of producing and selling hand-crafted Hanafuda cards painted on mulberry tree bark. Though it took a while to catch on, soon the Yakuza began using Hanafuda cards in their gambling parlors, and card games became popular in Japan again. One set Nintendo Koppai found huge success with was the Disney hanafuda cards[4]

Today, despite its focus on video games, Nintendo still produces the cards in Japan, including a special edition Mario themed set previously available through Club Nintendo. This is mostly in recognition of its own company history, rather than specifically for profit. In 2006, Nintendo published Clubhouse Games (42 All-Time Classics in the United Kingdom) for the Nintendo DS, which included the Koi-Koi game which is played with Hanafuda.

Elsewhere in the world

Hanafuda is commonly played in the state of Hawaii in the United States and South Korea, though under different names. In Hawaii, there is Hawaiian-style Koi-Koi which is called Sakura, Higobana, and sometimes Hanafura. In South Korea, the cards are called Hwatu (Korean: 화투, Hanja: 花鬪); the name literally translates as battle of flowers. One of the most common Hwatu game is Go-stop (Korean: 고스톱)[5] or Seotda (Korean: 섯다). Hwatu is very commonly played in South Korea during special holidays such as the Lunar New Years, and also during the Korean holiday of Chuseok (추석). Playing Go-stop at holiday family gatherings has been a Korean tradition for many years. The Korean version is usually played with three players, with two-person variants. Hanafuda is also played in Micronesia, where it is known under the same name, and is a four-person game, which is often paired cross-table.

Cards

There are twelve suits, representing months. Each is designated by a flower, and each suit has four cards. Typically, each suit will have two normal cards and two special cards. The point values could be considered unnecessary and arbitrary, as the most popular games only concern themselves with certain combinations of taken cards.

Month Flower Cards Images
January Matsu (, pine) Two Normals (1 point), one Poetry Ribbon (5 points) and one Special: Crane and Sun (20 points) File:Kintengu 01c.png File:Kintengu 01d.png File:Kintengu 01h.png File:Kintengu 01s.png
February Ume (, plum blossom) Two Normals (1 point), one Poetry Ribbon (5 points) and one Special: Bush-warbler in a Tree (10 points) File:Kintengu 02c.png File:Kintengu 02d.png File:Kintengu 02h.png File:Kintengu 02s.png
March Sakura (, cherry blossom) Two Normals (1 point), one Poetry Ribbon (5 points) and one Special: Camp Curtain (20 points) File:Kintengu 03c.png File:Kintengu 03d.png File:Kintengu 03h.png File:Kintengu 03s.png
April Fuji (, wisteria) Two Normals (1 point), one Red Ribbon (5 points) and one Special: Cuckoo (10 points) File:Kintengu 04c.png File:Kintengu 04d.png File:Kintengu 04h.png File:Kintengu 04s.png
May Ayame (菖蒲, iris) Two Normals (1 point), one Red Ribbon (5 points) and one Special: Water Iris and Eight-plank Bridge (10 points) File:Kintengu 05c.png File:Kintengu 05d.png File:Kintengu 05h.png File:Kintengu 05s.png
June Botan (牡丹, peony) Two Normals (1 point), one Purple Ribbon (5 points) and one Special: Butterflies (10 points) File:Kintengu 06c.png File:Kintengu 06d.png File:Kintengu 06h.png File:Kintengu 06s.png
July Hagi (, bush clover) Two Normals (1 point), one Red Ribbon (5 points) and one Special: Boar (10 points) File:Kintengu 07c.png File:Kintengu 07d.png File:Kintengu 07h.png File:Kintengu 07s.png
August Susuki (, Susuki grass) Two Normals (1 point), two Specials: Geese in Flight (10 points), Full Moon with Red Sky (20 points) File:Kintengu 08c.png File:Kintengu 08d.png File:Kintengu 08h.png File:Kintengu 08s.png
September Kiku (, chrysanthemum) Two Normals (1 point), one Purple Ribbon (5 points) and one Special: Poetry Sake Cup (10 points) File:Kintengu 09c.png File:Kintengu 09d.png File:Kintengu 09h.png File:Kintengu 09s.png
October Momiji (紅葉, maple) Two Normals (1 point), one Purple Ribbon (5 points) and one Special: Deer and Maple (10 points) File:Kintengu 10c.png File:Kintengu 10d.png File:Kintengu 10h.png File:Kintengu 10s.png
November Yanagi (, willow) One Red Ribbon (5 points) and three Specials: Lightning (1 point), Swallow (10 points), Ono no Michikaze ("Rainman") with Umbrella and Frog (20 points) File:Kintengu 11d.png File:Kintengu 11c.png File:Kintengu 11h.png File:Kintengu 11s.png
December Kiri (, paulownia) Three Normals (1 point, one off-shaded), and one Special: Chinese Phoenix (20 points) File:Kintengu 12c.png File:Kintengu 12d.png File:Kintengu 12h.png File:Kintengu 12s.png

The Korean cards for Go-Stop, which uses a very similar deck of cards, have November and December swapped around. They also commonly have additional joker cards added.[6]

Card significance

  • The January matsu Poetry Ribbon card has the phrase akayoroshi (あかよろし), employing the hentaigana character 𛀙 for the ka (). The meaning of the phrase is currently unknown. It is theorized it might mean "明らかによろしい" - "obviously good."[7]
  • The February ume Poetry Ribbon card has the same phrase akayoroshi.
  • The March sakura Poetry Ribbon card has the phrase Miyoshino (みよしの) referring to the place Miyoshino (美吉野) in Nara. The town is known for its cherry blossoms.
  • The September kiku sake cup card has the character for kotobuki (寿), meaning long life.
  • The November yanagi Rain card image portrays Ono no Michikaze.

Variants

There are variations of games played with Hanafuda.

Rules

The following rules are not official: there are many different games played with Hanafuda.

Objective

Accumulate more points than the opponent. Either a set number of rounds is played, a point goal is set to determine the winner, or players try to get so many more points than their opponent.

Rules of play

Cards are shuffled and placed into a pile (called the stock). Eight cards are placed face up between the players, and then eight cards are dealt face-down to each player. If there are more than two players, then the hand size is decreased.

Play

Play starts with the dealer and proceeds counterclockwise.[8] The player takes a card that was dealt to them and matches suit with a card that is on the table. If there isn't a matching card, the player discards a card to the center of the table. Then, the top stock card is turned face up, and if there is a matching suit on the playing field, the player takes the cards, otherwise the stock card is added to the playing field.[9]

Play ends when either the stock is exhausted or either player's hand is empty.

If a player is dealt four pairs or two complete suits, that player automatically wins the round. Scoring for this instance varies, but can be the value of the cards in the playing field.

Hiki

If there are a number of cards on the playing field of one suit, and a player has the rest of the suit in hand, this is a hiki. The player may take the entire suit of cards on their turn instead of playing a card from their hand. Trying to take a card from a hiki with the storm card is an illegal move. If the cards are dealt so that all four of one suit are on the playing field, the cards are shuffled and redealt. If three cards are on the table, they are stacked together and the remaining card takes all three.

Scoring

At the end of the round, each player adds the value of all cards they have taken.

In some variations, 'winner takes all', meaning the winner of the match gets all the points the opponent has accumulated in that round.

Card sets and scoring can vary by which variant of Hanafuda is being played.

Oya-gachi

In case of a tie, dealer wins. If the dealer isn't involved with the tie, the player closest to the dealer's left wins.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Games played with Flower Cards". www.pagat.com. Retrieved 20 December 2017.
  2. ^ Pakarnian, John, "Game Boy: Glossary of Japanese Gambling Games", Metropolis, January 22, 2010, p. 15.
  3. ^ Harris, Blake J., Console Wars: Sega, Nintendo, and the Battle that Defined a Generation, It Books, 2014-May-13. ISBN 978-0062276698. "Chapter 5"
  4. ^ "Sept. 23, 1889: Success Is in the Cards for Nintendo". WIRED. Retrieved 2018-11-14.
  5. ^ "Rules of Card Games: Go Stop". www.pagat.com. Retrieved 20 December 2017.
  6. ^ "sloperama.com". www.sloperama.com. Retrieved 20 December 2017.
  7. ^ "花札の謎シリーズ 赤短『あかよろし?』". Ohishi Tengudo.
  8. ^ Japan Publications (1970). Hanafuda the Flower Card Game. Japan Publications. p. 22. ISBN 9780870404306.
  9. ^ Hanafuda Rules. digidemon.com

new-year-flowers==External links==