Hanafuda

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Hanafuda Flash Hanafuda is a Japanese traditional card game, and Koi Koi is one of ways to play Hanafuda with two players. The player throws a card on the same suit card to capture them. The winner is the one who makes the special combination of several cards which is called 'Yaku'. Get 50 points to win. How to play Hanafuda (Koi Koi). Hanafuda - 花札, translated as 'flowers cards' - is a traditional japanese playing cards. It has 48 cards divided into 12 months of the japanese calendar. Each month features a floral theme and symbols proposed by the japanese nature through the seasons of a year. This playing cards is also present in Korea (hwatu) and Hawaii.

Below are complete instructions on how to play Hanafuda Hawaii Style. Each section includes a short animated video.

Watch a video of the complete instructions here >

Watch a video about the cards >

Hanafuda

Hanafuda Hawaii Style playing cards have many aids to help make learning to play easy and fun. Most importantly, the point value of cards has been added to the top left.

The traditional Japanese months written on the top right of the cards represent the old Japanese lunar calendar months. They do not exactly match modern calendar months, but the suits will be referred to by their roughly equivalent English names. Use these to match suits, or hiki.

On the bottom, are aids to help match bonus point combinations, called yaku.

The deck is composed of 48 cards. They are divided into twelve suits, one for each month of the year. Each suit or hiki has four cards. The same plant is shown as the common element on each of these four cards. For example, cherry blossoms are depicted on all the cards representing the month of March. The picture below shows the cards in order starting with January on the left and ending with December on the right.

Four of the most ornate cards are worth 20 points. Eleven cards are worth 10 points. Ten of these cards are decorated with a rectangular piece of paper used for writing poetry, called tanzaku. Ten other cards with birds, butterflies or other animals are worth 5 points. The rest are “plain” cards, called kasu, with zero point value.

Watch a video about the game >

Win by accumulating the most points by matching cards. The total possible score is 240 points.

There are many different games played with Hanafuda cards in Japan, Korea, Micronesia, and Hawai‘i. The Hanafuda Hawaii Style cards are specially designed for playing the game called Sakura, which is specific to Hawai‘i. Rules vary depending on whom you ask, but the following instructions explain the fundamentals of the game. Make sure that everyone agrees to the same rules before playing.

Two to six people may play the game. It is also possible to play as partners: four players, on two teams, or six players on three teams. When playing as partners, each team places all captured cards together for the team. However, players are not allowed to show each other the cards in their hand.

First, determine the dealer, or oya. For the first game, each player draws one card randomly from the deck. The player with the earliest month in the year is the dealer. After each game, the winner becomes the oya (dealer) for the next game.

The player to the dealer's left shuffles the deck of cards, and offers it to the player on the dealer's right for the cut. When there are only two players, the player who shuffles passes the deck back to the dealer.

To cut the cards, take a portion from the top of the deck and put those cards on the bottom of the deck. You may also tap the top of the deck instead, to indicate that you are satisfied with the shuffle.

The dealer then deals the proper number of cards to each player face down in a counter-clockwise direction. Next, the dealer places the proper number of cards face up on the table, or in the “field.” The remaining cards are placed face down in a stack to draw from. Refer to the following chart for the number of cards to deal.

CARD DEALING CHART

Players

Cards in Hand

Cards in Field

2 players

8 cards

8 cards

3 players

7 cards

6 cards

4 players

5 cards

8 cards

5 players

4 cards

8 cards

6 players

3 cards

12 cards

The goal is to match cards with ones in the same suit or hiki in the field. Only cards with a point value add to a player's score.

The dealer has the first turn. The order of play flows in a counter–clockwise direction. Each turn has two parts. First, a player draws a card from her hand and places it in the field. If the player has a card that matches the suit of a card in the field, she places the card from her hand on top of the matching card in the field to show everyone the match. The player then takes both her own card and the card she has captured and places them face up in a “points section” in front of herself. She then discards any cards with no value in a kasu (rubbish) pile behind the drawing stack.

Second, the player draws one card from the drawing stack. If that card matches a card in the field, the player must take the pair of cards. Otherwise, she leaves it face up in the field. This ends a player’s turn. It is possible to capture up to 4 cards per turn.

The player to the right takes the next turn. The play continues in a counter-clockwise direction until all the cards have been used in each player’s hand.

If playing with teams, each partner sits across from the other.
Remember, the direction of play goes counter-clockwise.

Watch a video about the gaji >

The gaji (lightning) card is part of the November suit. If the gaji is in the field, a player can capture the gaji by matching it with another card in the November suit.

If the gaji card is part of a player's hand he can use it like a wild card to capture any card in the field regardless of its suit. Keep the gaji paired with the captured card. Any cards from the captured suit remaining in the field at the end of the game go to the holder of the gaji card.

The gaji card cannot be used as a wild card if there is a hiki held by another player.

Watch a video about the hiki rules>

In special situations, a player can claim all of the cards from one suit or hiki in a single turn.

If all four cards of a hiki are in the field at the beginning of the game, the dealer takes all four cards.

Hanafuda Earrings Demon Slayer

If a player sees all 4 cards of a suit, in whatever combination, either in her hand or in the field, she can declare a “hiki” and capture all 4 cards. For example, if a player has one card in her hand that matches three in the field, she can declare a “hiki” and take all three cards in the field in one turn. The player holding a hiki does not need to declare her hiki until another player attempts to capture one of the cards in her hiki with a gaji card.

The game is over when there are no more cards in the players' hands. Each player counts his points and the one with the greatest number of points wins. Only cards with a point value are counted.

If the scores are tied, the dealer wins. A tie game is called a tonton. If players other then the dealer are tied, the player closest to the dealer's right is the winner. If the dealer wins by virtue of being the oya (boss), he is called oya kachi (boss winner).

Once you get used to playing for only the point values of cards, you can add special card combinations called yaku to the play. This addition makes for a much more exciting and challenging game.

Hanafuda

Watch a video about the yaku rules>

Hanafuda Card Game

Yaku (bonus combinations) are special three–card combinations. There are eight yaku in this game. The yaku are counted at the end of the game.

If a player gets one or more yaku, all the other players must deduct 50 points from their total score for each yaku held by another player. If a player has two yaku, everyone else must deduct 100 points. If there are three players and two each have a yaku, the two players with yaku must deduct 50 points each, and the third player must deduct 100 points.

If a player defeats his opponent by at least 50 points, it is called a chu victory. If the margin is more than 100 points, the player can claim a basa victory.

To help identify yaku combinations, eight different Japanese letters are at the bottom of the yaku cards. The letters are from the beginning of the “iroha uta” poem. This poem is like our alphabet song, but for Japanese letters. The poem begins:

Which roughly translated is, “colorful flowers blossom and fall.”

Match the letters at the bottom of the cards to make yaku combinations. Below are the eight yaku combinations:

Hanafuda (花札) is a style of Japaneseplaying cards used to play a variety of games. Hanafuda translates to 'flower cards'.[1][2] The name also refers to some games played with the cards.

History[edit]

Playing cards were introduced to Japan by the Portuguese in the mid-16th century. The Portuguese deck consisted of 48 cards, four suits divided into 12 ranks. The first Japanese-made decks made during the Tenshō period (1573-92) mimicked Portuguese decks and are referred to as Tenshō Karuta. The main game was a trick-taking game intermediate in evolution between Triunfo and Ombre.[3] After Japan closed off all contact with the Western world in 1633, foreign playing cards were banned.[4]

In 1648, Tenshō Karuta were banned by the Tokugawa shogunate.[5] During prohibition, gambling with cards remained highly popular which led to disguised card designs. Each time gambling with a card deck of a particular design became too popular, the government banned it, which then prompted the creation of a new design. This cat and mouse game between the government and rebellious gamblers resulted in the creation of increasingly abstract and minimalist regional patterns (地方札). These designs were initially called Yomi Karuta after the popular Poch-like game of Yomi which was known by the 1680s.[6]

Through the Meiwa, An'ei, and Tenmei eras (roughly 1764–1789), a game called Mekuri took the place of Yomi. It became so popular that Yomi Karuta was renamed Mekuri Karuta.[6] Mechanically, Mekuri is similar to Chinese fishing games.[7] Cards became so commonly used for gambling that they were banned in 1791, during the Kansei era.

The earliest known reference to Hana Awase (hanafuda) is from 1816 when it was recorded as a banned gambling tool. Unlike earlier decks it consists of 12 months (suits) divided into four rank-like categories. The majority of hanafuda games are descended from Mekuri although Yomi adaptations for the flower cards survived until the 20th century.[6] Though they can still be used for gambling, its structure and design is less convenient than other decks such as Kabufuda. In the Meiji period, playing cards became tolerated by the authorities.

In 1889, Fusajiro Yamauchi founded Nintendo for the purposes of producing and selling hand-crafted hanafuda. Nintendo has focused on video games since the 1970s but continues to produce cards in Japan, including a few Mario-themed sets. Nintendo has licensed many third-party video game adaptations of hanafuda over the decades. The Koi-Koi game played with hanafuda cards is included in Nintendo's own Clubhouse Games (2006) for the Nintendo DS, and Clubhouse Games: 51 Worldwide Classics (2020) for the Nintendo Switch.[8]

Outside of Japan[edit]

In Hawaii, there is Hawaiian-style Koi-Koi which is also known as 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. It most likely was brought to Korea during the late 1890s.[9][10] Two of the most common Hwatu games are Go-stop (Korean: 고스톱)[11] and 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 (the former South Seas Mandate), where it is known as Hanahuda and is a four-person game, which is often paired cross-table.[12]

Cards[edit]

There are 48 cards total, divided into twelve suits, representing months of the year. Each is designated by a flower and has four cards. The point values should be considered merely as a ranking mechanism, as the most popular games only concern themselves with certain combinations of taken cards.

Month • FlowerHikari

(20 points)

Tane

(10 points)

Tanzaku

(5 points)

Kasu

(1 point)

January • Pine

Crane and Sun

Poetry tanzaku

2 cards

February • Plum blossom

Poetry tanzaku

2 cards

March • Cherry blossom

Poetry tanzaku

2 cards

April • Wisteria

Plain tanzaku

2 cards

May • Iris

Plain tanzaku

2 cards

June • Peony

Blue tanzaku

2 cards

July • Bush clover

Plain tanzaku

2 cards

August • Susuki grass[a]

2 cards

September • Chrysanthemum

Blue tanzaku

2 cards

October • Maple

Blue tanzaku

2 cards

November • Willow

Plain tanzaku

December • Paulownia

3 cards

Some decks may have an extra card which could be blank (to draw a replacement) or feature a manufacturer's logo. In the Korean Hwatu version, the November and December suits are swapped. Hwatu may also include a variety of extra cards ranging in functionality, including 'service cards' (서비스 패) which award various bonuses.[13]

Card significance[edit]

The January and February poetry tanzaku cards ( ) have the phrase akayoroshi (あかよろし, “red is good”), using the hentaigana character 𛀙 for ka.

Hanafuda 2

Hanafuda Koi Koi

The March poetry tanzaku card ( ) reads mi-Yoshino (みよしの), referring to the town of Yoshino, Nara. Yoshino is known for its cherry trees, especially of its Somei-Yoshino hybrid.

The September sake cup card ( ) has the kanjikotobuki (寿, “long life”) inscribed on it.

Games[edit]

Mekuri derived games:

  • Hana Awase
    • Minhwatu
    • Koi-Koi
    • Roppyakken
    • Mushi
  • Hachi
  • Hachi-hachi
    • Sudaoshi
  • Tensho

Yomi derived games:

  • Poka
  • Hiyoko
  • Isuri

Gabo Japgi/Kabufuda derived games:

  • Seotda
  • Doryjytgo-ttang

See also[edit]

  • Tazza: The High Rollers (or The War of Flower)

Notes[edit]

Hanafuda cards
  1. ^Sometimes 芒 susuki is translated as pampas (grass).

References[edit]

  1. ^McLeod, John. 'Games played with Flower Cards'. pagat.com. Retrieved 20 December 2017.
  2. ^Pakarnian, John, 'Game Boy: Glossary of Japanese Gambling Games', Metropolis, January 22, 2010, p. 15.
  3. ^Depaulis, Thierry (2009). 'Playing the Game: Iberian Triumphs Worldwide'. The Playing-Card. Vol 38-2, p. 134-137.
  4. ^Harris, Blake J., Console Wars: Sega, Nintendo, and the Battle that Defined a Generation, It Books, 2014-May-13. ISBN978-0062276698. 'Chapter 5'
  5. ^Mann, Sylvia; Wayland, Virginia (1973). The Dragons of Portugal. Farnham: Sanford. p. 46.
  6. ^ abcKuromiya Kimihiko. (2005). 'Kakkuri: The Last Yomi Game of Japan'. The Playing-Card, Vol 33-4. p. 232-235.
  7. ^McLeod, John; Dummett, Michael (1975). 'Hachi-Hachi'. The Playing-Card. 3 (4): 26–39.
  8. ^Lane, Gavin. 'Nintendo Shares A Handy Infographic Featuring All 51 Worldwide Classic Clubhouse Games'. Nintendo Life. Retrieved 2020-07-21.
  9. ^Kim, Kwang-ŏn. (2004). Tong Asia ŭi nori. Seoul: Minsogwŏn. ISBN89-5638-121-6. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  10. ^Fairbairn, John (1991). 'Modern Korean cards - a Japanese perspective'. The Playing-Card. 20 (2): 68–72.
  11. ^McLeod, John. 'Rules of Card Games: Go Stop'. pagat.com. Retrieved 20 December 2017.
  12. ^Iramk, Charlene. 'Hanahuda'. Hanahuda. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  13. ^Sloper, Tom. 'Go-Stop'. www.sloperama.com. Retrieved 20 December 2017.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hanafuda.
Look up hanafuda in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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