Table feel
Schnapsen has a high level of direct confrontation and strategic depth, with frequent interaction among players. However, it does not require much cooperation.
Schnapsen is a point trick-taking game for 2 players using a 20 card deck consisting of ace, ten, king, queen, jack of the four suits. (Value and rank are the same as in Skat and Schafkopf.) Each round players are dealt five cards, replenishing from stock after each trick, with o...
Players
2
Time
?-?
Age
8+
Weight
2.06
Rating
7.00
Should this hit the table?
Schnapsen has a high level of direct confrontation and strategic depth, with frequent interaction among players. However, it does not require much cooperation.
Teaching signal
High replayability
Highly interactive
Scales well
Deep strategy
More strategic control
Schnapsen has a high level of direct confrontation and strategic depth, with frequent interaction among players. However, it does not require much cooperation.
Schnapsen offers a high degree of variability with its gameboard, allowing for different experiences each time it is played. The presence of expansions adds some new content and gameplay elements, although not as impactful as desired. The game provides deep strategic possibilities and room for players to improve their tactics and strategies over time. The player interaction score is average. The game scales well with different numbers of players without compromising its appeal or balance. While it is not the easiest game to learn, it offers a decent balance between easiness and depth. Overall, Schnapsen has a good replayability score of 7.82, making it a game worth revisiting.
Schnapsen has a moderate level of luck. While random elements do have an impact on the game outcome, players have a significant ability to mitigate the effects of luck through strategic decisions and planning. The game relies more on player strategy and decisions rather than pure luck.
Overview
Schnapsen is a point trick-taking game for 2 players using a 20 card deck consisting of ace, ten, king, queen, jack of the four suits. (Value and rank are the same as in Skat and Schafkopf.) Each round players are dealt five cards, replenishing from stock after each trick, with one turned up to indicate trump. The goal in each deal is to accumulate sixty-six trick points, where the card values are A=11, T=10, K=4, Q=3, J=2. The suit led does not need to be followed until the stock is closed or exhausted, at which point suit must be followed, the trick must be won if possible, and you must trump if you cannot follow suit. Sixty-Six is a variant including nines and therefore 24 cards in total. Instead of five, six cards are dealt each round. Depending on the margin by which a player wins the deal, that player scores 1-3 game points. A player who reaches 7 points wins the whole game. If the other player failed to gain any points in the meantime, the game is a Bummerl of double value. This only matters if playing a match of multiple games, which ends once a player reaches a previously agreed upon number of points. Detailed rules can be found at http://psellos.com/schnapsen/rules.html. There also exists a - more complex - variant for three to four players: Bauernschnapsen. Commercial variants include WOO and Route 66: Get Your Tricks
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