Deuces | |
Subtitle: | A Patience game |
Origin: | England |
Alt Names: | Twos, The Twos, The Deuces |
Namedvariants: | Courtyard, Square |
Deck: | Double 52-card |
Family: | Napoleon at St Helena |
Type: | Simple packer |
Odds: | 1in2 |
Playing Time: | 10 min |
Deuces or Twos is a patience or card solitaire game of English origin which is played with two packs of playing cards. It is so called because each foundation starts with a Deuce, or Two. It belongs to a family of card games that includes Busy Aces, which is derived in turn from Napoleon at St Helena (aka Forty Thieves).
The game is first recorded by Professor Hoffmann in 1892 as The Twos[1] and subsequently by Dick in 1898 as The Deuces.[2] These early rules do not seem to allow sequences to be moved between depots in the tableau and they are followed in this regard by Coop (1939)[3] and Moyse (1950).[4] However most later rules, including Morehead and Mott-Smith (1949, 2001)[5] and Parlett (1979)[6] allow sequences or part-sequences, as well as single cards, to be transferred between depots. Sources also vary as to whether no, one or two redeals are permitted.
First, the eight two cards are separated from the deck and placed in two rows to form the foundations. Then, ten cards, four above the foundations and three at each of the left and the right of the foundations, are dealt. These are the bases for the tableau piles.
The foundations should be built up by suit up to kings, then aces. In the tableau, building is down by suit, also aces can be built upon by kings.
The top cards of each tableau piles are available for play on the foundations or on other tableau piles. Sequences, where in part or in whole, can be moved as one unit. Spaces in the tableau are filled only with cards from either the stock or the wastepile.
The stock can be dealt one card at a time, onto a wastepile, the top card of which is available for play on the foundations and on the tableau. There is no redeal
The game is won when all the cards are dealt onto the foundations with the aces on top.
Two variants of Deuces, both of which are akin to Busy Aces, are: