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Achievements in Gaming

Achievements in Gaming was inspired by the D6 Generation podcast. It is a weekly post, where this writer shares his gaming accomplishments, thoughts, ideas, dreams, and contributions.
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Reiner Knizia’s Great Wall on the Great Wall

grey endres
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Lenexa
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During my recent trip to China, I hiked my copy of the Great Wall of China up to the Great Wall. While there, I played a two person game. While we were playing, a spirited card game was occurring among some local teenagers. They offered me a seat, but after watching several hands, I could not figure out what they were playing. Although when they played a card, they would slap it down passionately. We hiked the Jinshanling Pass which is about 93 miles north of Beijing. This section of the Great Wall is less traveled/visited by tourists.

Throughout our trip, I saw many kinds of games being played as well as being sold. After visiting the Temple of Heaven in Beijing, I saw Mahjong, Dominoes, and Chinese Chess being played. While shopping in the market that surrounds the Yu Garden in Shanghai, I saw various card games being played by the local merchants.


I was surprised to find so many games for sale. The costs were much less than my friendly local game store. Before haggling, Stone Age cost 128 Yuan which is about $22. It was hard to say if they were real or counterfeit copies. As a Sid Sackson fan, I was tickled to find a Chinese copy of I'm the Boss! for sale in a store in Shanghai.
In that same store, I saw a card game called Blitzkrieg Death Front. It did not include English rules, and it is not in the BGG data base so I passed. I can’t believe I did not at least take a picture of it. I did however find a link to it via Swan Panasian games; http://www.boardgamer.org/product_info.php?cPath=364&product...

In addition to playing the Great Wall, I also played a game of Hive at the Wall. We were able to camp along the Wall, and I was hoping to facilitate a game of Werewolf, but it gets very dark on the Wall after the sun goes down. What an awesome setting that would have been.


During the plane trip to and from China, my son and I played Mate which is a simple card game out of Sid Sackson's Gamut of Games. Sid considered it a pure information game.
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Subscribe sub options Mon Mar 21, 2011 3:58 pm
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Lacombe
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Quote:
During my recent trip to China, I hiked my copy of the Great Wall of China up to the Great Wall. While there, I played a two person game. While we were playing, a spirited card game was occurring among some local teenagers. They offered me a seat, but after watching several hands, I could not figure out what they were playing. Although when they played a card, they would slap it down passionately. We hiked the Jinshanling Pass which is about 93 miles north of Beijing. This section of the Great Wall is less traveled/visited by tourists.


From the picture and your description [and the location], it's almost certainly a variant of Big Two or another member of the climbing family.

Big Two itself is the only version I know that allows a four-of-a-kind-plus-one-more-card combination [what the young man is in the process of laying down in your picture] to be played [as opposed to four-of-a-kinds being a combination of four cards only].

Nearly all the members of the family use the 2-A-K-Q-etc ranking by which the player whose hand you can see has sorted his cards.

But, they're obviously using more than one deck [see that the guy whose hand you can see is holding an 8, whereas the guy playing down the cards has played four of them! And two 8s of Spades!]. There are many many variations within the family, obviously.

Probably the game is just Big Two and not one of the more obscure variants, and the only reason they added a second deck was to support more players. How many people were playing the game? I would bet it was more than 4, if I had to guess.
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  • Edited Mon Mar 21, 2011 5:32 pm
  • Posted Mon Mar 21, 2011 5:28 pm
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grey endres
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Nate, I am not familiar with that game. Thanks for post.

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  • Posted Mon Mar 21, 2011 6:03 pm
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Lacombe
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You own Tichu, which is a member of the family [by virtue of being a fairly minor variant to Zheng Fen].

Try it out sometime, or just try Big Two [you can use your Tichu deck or any normal deck].
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  • Edited Mon Mar 21, 2011 6:13 pm
  • Posted Mon Mar 21, 2011 6:09 pm
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