geek
The Hotness
Games|People|Company
Information
Designed By
Art By
Published By
Year Published
1600
# of Players:
2 − 6
User Suggested # of Players
Best with 3, 4 players
Recommended with 2, 3, 4 players
(2 voters) [poll]
Playing Time
30 minutes
Mfg Suggested Ages
8 and up
User Suggested Ages
5 and up
(1 voter) [poll]
Language Dependence
No necessary in-game text
(1 voter) [poll]
Category
Mechanic
Primary Name
Scopa
Alternate Names
Escoba
Expanded By
Families
Description Edit | History

Scopa is a traditional Italian card game (actually a family of card games that includes Scopone, Scopetta, and Scopone Scientifico) played in regions of Italy for over 400 years. The game is played with a 40-card Italian deck (similar to a conventional deck minus either the 8s, 9s, and 10s or alternatively, the Js, Qs, and Ks). Four-player games are usually played in partnership; other numbers of players typically play for themselves.

In the original Scopa base game, four cards are turned face up on the table, and players are dealt hands of three cards. On his or her turn, a player may capture any of the face-up cards on the table if the sum of the cards captured equals the value of the card played. If a player cannot make a capture, he or she must discard a card face-up onto the table. Cards are progressively handed out in lots of three until the deck is exhausted.

When the deck is exhausted, scoring is calculated. Players earn 1 point for "sweeping" the table, that is, for clearing the table of all face-up cards; 1 point for capturing the most cards; 1 point for capturing the most cards of the coin suit; 1 point for capturing the 7 of coins (the "settebello"); and 1 point for the best "primiera," that is, the best assemblage of high-value cards from each of the four suits.

The game is traditionally played until a player or team reaches a set number of points, usually 11 or 21.

The name "Scopa" means "sweep" or "broom" in Italian, and refers to the action of picking up all face-up cards on the table.

In some ways, Scopa can be thought of as a precursor to many popular modern game designs. The multiple competing goals and the limited hand-size make for a very modern-feeling game.

Re-implemented by:

More Information Edit | History

This page does not exist; you can edit this page to create it.

BGG Marketplace
Pg. 1
New £10.00 23-Apr-2008 flag
Images
Gallery: All | Game | People | Creative Hot | Recent
[Browse »] [Upload »] [Link Image]
Pg. 1 of 1
Files
Title | Hot | Recent
[Browse »] [Upload File »]
Pg. 1 of 1
0 Scopa-Homemade-Scoresheet (German).xls
Scopa-Homemade-Scoresheet (German)
2007-01-25
0 Scopa_und_Scopone-German.pdf
Rules for Scopa and Scopone (German)
2007-01-10
0 briscola_und_scopa-German.pdf
Rules for Scopa and Briscola (German)
2007-01-10
Statistics
Board Game Rank: 1436
Num Ratings: 135
Average Rating: 6.79
Standard Deviation: 1.34
Num Views: 16385
GeekBuddy Analysis: Analyze
Similarly Rated: View
Avg. Game Weight: 1.4 moreinfo
Fans: 2
Personal Comments: 63
Users Owning: 140
Users Wanting: 4
Users Trading: 1
Has Parts For Trade: 0
Want Parts In Trade: 0
Price History: View
Total Plays: 375
Plays This Month: 4
Linked Items Relationship: Expansions for this Game
[Submit Corrections »]
Sort:
Pg. 1 of 1
No Items Found
User Information
Use this tool to rate games, save comments, and manage your collection.
Front Page | Welcome | Contact | Privacy Policy | Advertise | Support BGG | Feeds RSS
BoardGameGeek and the BoardGameGeek logo are trademarks of BoardGameGeek, LLC.