You cannot look at the card from the pile and then change your mind. At each of your four turns for this round, you may choose either from the face up discard or from the face down pile. Here’s where the fun, chance, and risk start!ġ. You may peek at the 2 cards CLOSE to you, but NOT at the other 2. *Place your 4 cards in a square, and keep 2 cards close to you, and 2 cards farther away. One card is faced up, and that is the Discard pile. The rest of the cards are in a pile face down and become the pile to pick from. How to play: Each player is dealt 4 cards face down. Therefore, Kings, pairs, 3 and 4 of a kind, Aces and low point cards are better than high point cards, Jacks or Queens.Īfter each round, the value for the 4 cards is added up for each person’s score.Įxamples: Jack, Queen, 4 and Ace: 10, 10, 4, 1 = 25 points Note that 1 King = 0, 2 Kings= 0, 3 kings= -5, and 4 kings = -10 Play 18 rounds-hence the name, Golf.Ĭard values: Ace = 1 2 through 10 are face value (2 points up to 10 points) Jacks and Queens are each 10 points Kings = ZERO! A PAIR = ZERO! Three of a kind = -5! (That’s minus 5) Four of a kind = – 10! (minus 10) Each player is dealt 4 cards face down per round. We played this for well over an hour on an airplane ride too! In my last post, I mentioned teaching my young granddaughter a card game called Golf. It has been a hit among my group of friends, and was easy to teach my 6 year-old granddaughter. She enjoyed playing, and didn’t realize she was using math to total her points and add on to her score.
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