
For example, a 6 of trumps beats an ace of any other suit. A trump card of any rank beats all cards in the other three suits. If the attack fails, the defender becomes the next attacker.Ĭards are ranked 6 7 8 9 10 J Q K A (ascending order). If the attack succeeds (see below), the defender loses their turn and the attack passes to the player on the defender's left. After each round of attack play proceeds clockwise. The player to the attacker's left is always the defender. The player who has the lowest trump card will be the first attacker (note that there is no obligation to play that lowest trump card as the first card). Cards discarded due to successful defences are placed in a discard pile next to the talon. The turnup remains part of the talon and is drawn as the last card. The rest of the pack is then placed on half over the turnup and at right angles to it, so that it remains visible. For example, if it is the 7 of diamonds, then diamonds rank higher than all plain-suit cards. The bottom card of the stock is turned and placed face up on the table, its suit determining the trump suit for the current deal. The deck is shuffled, and each player is dealt six cards. Variants exist that use more than one deck. In theory, the limit for a game with one deck of 36 cards is six players, but this extends a considerable advantage to the player who attacks first, and a considerable disadvantage to the player who defends first. The game is typically played with two to five people, with six players if desired, using a deck of 36 cards, for example a standard 52-card deck from which the numerical cards 2 through 5 have been removed. Initially a social pastime of uneducated peasants and industrial workers, after the October Revolution Durak has spread to numerous social levels by mid-20th century to soon become the most popular Soviet card game. The game is attributed to have appeared in late 18th century Russian Empire and was popularized by Imperial Army conscripts during the 1812 Russo-French war. At the end of the game, the last player with cards in their hand is the durak or 'fool'.

The objective of the game is to shed all one's cards when there are no more cards left in the deck. It has since become known in other parts of the world. It is Russia's most popular card game, having displaced Preferans. Russian card game that is popular in many post-Soviet states. Probability, strategy, memory ġ0 and above (assuming appropriate maturity)ĭurak (Russian: дурак, IPA: ( listen), " fool") is a traditional

1 – deck, 2 – first attacker, 3 – defender, 4 – next defender.
