Liverpool rummy

Liverpool Rummy
Origin United States
Type Matching
Family Going out
Players 3-8
Skills required Strategy
Cards 52 cards (104-156)
Deck French
Play Clockwise
Playing time 20-30 min.
Random chance Easy
Related games
Canasta

Liverpool Rummy is a multi-player, multi-round card game similar to other variants of rummy that adds features like buying and going out. It's the same as Contract Rummy, except that if a player manages to cut the exact number of cards required to deal the hand and leave a face-up card, then the cutting player's score is reduced by 50 points.[1]

The Game

The game consists of seven deals of the cards. The objective is to be holding the lowest valued cards at the end of each deal. At the end of each deal the score for each player is written down, and the player with the lowest total score at the end of the seven deals wins the game.

In each deal the players reduce the value of the cards held in their hands by laying on the table those cards that fit a specific "contract" of Sets and Runs.

The Deck

The game is played with multiple standard 52-pack plus the jokers. 2 decks for three to five players. 3 decks for more players. The ranking from low-to-high is A-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-J-Q-K-A. Aces can be low or high. Jokers are wild cards and can stand in for any other card.

Dealing

The dealer deals 12 cards to each player. After all the players' hands have been dealt, another card placed face-up in a central location known as the discard pile.

The player to the immediate left of the dealer plays first.

Gameplay

On each turn, a player:

Play continues, in alternating turns, until one player goes out, or has no cards left in their hand. Points are tallied and recorded by a score-keeper. All of the cards are shuffled and the next round of play commences.

Laying Down

The objective in liverpool rummy is to improve one's score by laying down to reduce the number of cards in hand, and eventually going out before other players. Within each round there are two types of card groupings that are required:

Aces rank as high or low, but one cannot create a run that loops around, also known as "turning the corner". A 2 3 4 is allowed, J Q K A is allowed, but K A 2 3 is not.

PENALTY: If a player begins to lay cards down and finds they cannot actually lay down, they must add fifty points to their score.

Requirements for laying down

The requirements for each round of play are as follows:

Eighth - 6 sets
ninth - 4 runs
tenth 3 runs 3 sets no buying

Buying Cards

After each player has finished their turn by discarding, if the next player declines to pick up the new top card of the face-up discard pile, any other player may "buy" it. The "price" of picking up this extra card out of turn is drawing an additional card from the face-down pile. If more than one player desires to buy a card, the player who is nearest (clockwise) the player about to draw gets precedence.

The option to buy ends when the next player picks up a card from the top of the face-down deck.

Wild Cards

Jokers are wild cards, and can represent any card (suit and number). However there are restrictions on their usage.

During their turn while playing off another player, a player may replace that other player's laid Joker from within a run with the card it is substituting, so long as that Joker is placed somewhere else before the player concludes their turn. An easy way to "waste" the extra Joker if it doesn't allow you to lay additional cards is to simply add it to a set, as this prohibits another player from performing the wild card substitution trick again.

Playing off other players

Once a player has laid down, they can then attempt to further reduce the number of cards in their hand by adding to other players' laid cards. If another player has laid down a set of 3's (3 3♣ 3♠) and you have a 3 in your hand, you may lay it down on his pile. If another player has laid down a run of hearts (3 4 5 6), you may add a 7 to their pile.

Calling rummy

Once a player has laid down, their discard must not fit into either their own or any other player's laid cards.If this is the case, every other player has until the commencement of the next player's turn to call rummy on the offending player, in which case that offending player picks up their discard and one additional card from the top of the deck. Once a player lays his cards down to 'go out' of a round, rummy rules no longer apply.

Evaluation of the hand

At the end of each round when a player goes out, the rest of the players total their scores by counting up the value of the cards remaining in their hands. Cards are valued as follows:

Jokers are 20 points each.

The player with the lowest point total at the end of final round wins, so players usually work to lower their scores by going down, playing off other players who have gone down and, secondarily, replacing high cards (such as face cards and aces) with lower ones.

Going Out

A player goes out when he successfully discards the only remaining card in hand, marking the conclusion of the step for all players. A player gets to this point by laying down and then playing off his and other players’ hands.

A player is floating if he exhausts his cards and is not able to discard. In this case, the hand continues until somebody successfully goes out. At no point in time is it acceptable to draw a card from the up pile and discard the same card during the same turn. It follows that a floater must draw an unplayable card from the deck (down-pile) in order to go out.

It is customary to knock on the table when there is only one card left in your hand. This alerts other players of closeness to going out.

Me

Me derives its name from a player out of turn buying a card from the discard pile. The player calls "me" and then picks up the discarded (bought) card and a penalty (the price for buying the card). The difference from Liverpool Rummy is that whoever calls "me" first gets the card as opposed to the player who is nearest (clockwise) the player about to draw.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.