Skat Card Game

  

Meet the Germans

Skat as You Love It - We provide the original Altenburger cards. Play according to the international Skat Order ISkO. Use special rules and play as you like. Compete With the Best - Play your way to the top of the league. Officers' Skat (Offiziersskat), is a trick-taking card game for two players which is based on the rules of Skat. It may be played with a German or French pack of 32 cards which, from the outset of the game, are laid out in rows both face down and face up. Skat is the ultimate card game! If you like competitive card games, Skat will not disappoint you. While it takes a couple of sessions to learn, the enjoyment is for a lifetime.

Skat Card Game Online

The game's rules can appear mysterious to the noninitiated, yet more Germans play it than football. It's also listed as a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage asset.

To start out, full disclosure: I'm not sure I'll ever learn. I've tried, a bit. But to be honest, as a Canadian who's been living for 15 years in Germany and who's otherwise well integrated in the country, it's nice to know I still have something left to learn that would 'make me even more German': how to play skat.

And to my defense, it's not a game you can simply pick up through observation.

Skat is a strategic, trick-taking card game played with three players. Bid wisely and play correctly to maximize your points. Find the video tutorial and written explanation for how to play the card game. SKAT is the most popular German card game adapted for your computer. Learn to play Skat - become an expert - enjoy the game whenever you like. SKAT offers you two computer opponents.

'With poker, you can watch other people play for a half hour and then you can play, whereas most people play skat their whole life and they still don't get it,' says skat expert Jan Ehlers.

But even with its seemingly puzzling rules, there are more people who play skat than football in Germany: some 20 to 25 million, according to the estimates of the German Skat Association. In Berlin alone there are 200 associations meeting up at least once a week to play, says Ehlers.

Jan Ehlers contributed to having skat listed as a German UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage asset

Skat

As the former deputy president of the German Skat Association, Ehlers promoted the successful bid to have the game listed by the German branch of UNESCO as Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2016.

Skat Card Game On-line

Temporary alliances and memory skills

Game

Skat is a three-player strategy card game. It involves an auction at the beginning of each round, based on each player's prospect of winning according to the cards they've been dealt. The highest bidder plays solo against the two others, who form a temporary alliance for the round. The players in the defending team, however, cannot communicate with each other — except through the cards they decide to play.

Traditionally, German-suited playing cards —with acorns, leaves, hearts, bells — were used, but the internationally widespread French-suited ones work as well, leaving out a number of cards as there are only 32 in the game. Each card has a certain value, and the whole game is worth 120 points. 'And the winner is always the one who has more as half of the points,' explains Ehlers.

For him and for many other skat fans, the skill factor is more important than the chance factor in this game. 'To play skat, you need a good memory. You need to be able to calculate in your head; a good skat player obviously counts the cards passing in every round.'

German-suited cards have acorns, leaves, hearts and bells

How it started

In 1813, court chamberlain Hans Carl Leopold von der Gabelentz, an administrator from the Thuringian city of Altenburg, near Leipzig, wrote down in a notebook his wins and losses for a game called 'scat.' It's the oldest known written reference to the card game.

That year, thousands of soldiers were stationed in Altenburg in preparation for the Battle of Leipzig during the Napoleonic Wars. Involving half a million soldiers and resulting in 127,000 casualties, it went down in history as the largest battle in Europe before World War I.

While waiting for combat, the soldiers spent a lot of time playing cards. They are the ones who contributed to turning the game into a popular pastime.

Now written 'skat,' the game took its name from the Italian 'scartare,' referring to the two cards that are discarded at the beginning of the game.

Skat in popular culture

Novels, paintings and even an opera pay tribute to the game.

In Erich Maria Remarque's classic novel set during World War I, All Quiet on the Western Front, skat is mentioned several times.

In one scene, the soldiers sitting in the trenches try to stop worrying about fellow troopers going insane during the attacks: 'Kat suggests a game of skat: It is easier when a man has something to do.'

Later in the book, a group of soldiers help out a wounded comrade-in-arms who can't leave his hospital bed during his first encounter with his wife in two years. Turning their backs away from the couple while they have sex, the men watch the door for intruders, all while playing a 'loud' game of skat.

Skat card game download

Concentrated skat players aren't typically loud, even though writer Kurt Tucholsky sarcastically described the game in 1920 as the nation's expression of joy: 'When a German is truly happy, he doesn't sing. He plays skat.'

Card

The same year Tucholsky wrote those words, Otto Dix created The Skat Players, a painting portraying three German military officers playing cards. It's not a scene of joy, however: They are extremely disfigured, with missing body parts replaced by prosthetics. The work, now part of the collection of Berlin's Neue Nationalgalerie, clearly criticized the horrors of war. According to art historians, the inspiration for the painting came from a real-life scene Dix had observed in a cafe.

Skat

But not all pop culture depictions of skat refer to war. In his comic opera Intermezzo, which premiered in 1924, composer Richard Strauss, a passionate skat player, included a scene of his alter ego playing the game.

A skat club in 1936

Skat also appears in post-WWII novels, including two works written by German Nobel Prize winners, Heinrich Böll's The Train was on Time and Günter Grass' The Tin Drum. Among others, the three-player card game serves as a metaphor for the love triangle between Oskar Matzerath's mother and his two 'presumptive fathers.' Grass was a renowned skat player himself.

Next generation?

What fascinates Jan Ehlers about the game is that it brings together people of all ages and social classes.

When players come together for a game or a tournament, Ehlers says, 'doctor' or 'professor' titles that are usually so important in Germany no longer matter. Everyone is on a first-name basis, using 'du' instead of the formal 'Sie.' 'When I played with Gerhard Schröder [the former German Chancellor and another skat enthusiast], I addressed him informally too.'

It also attracts players of all ages. Ehlers feels that children can easily learn by the age of 10 — he learned when he was 6, during breaks while helping his great-grandfather herding cows.

Even though volunteers from different regional branches of the German Skat Association are devoted to teaching the game to children, the tradition could be dying out. Many enthusiastic skat players are getting old. As for the younger generation, instead of a pack of 32 cards in their pocket, they usually have a smartphone always available to kill boredom.

Skat Card Game App

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Skat a Traditional Card Game

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Goals Of This Web Site

People who come here are looking for information on how to play Skat and perhaps pick up a few tidbits to improve their game. My plan is to pass on information that I've learned over the 40 plus years of playing SKAT and direct you to other websites that have a plethora of information on the game. Joe Wergin has written a book called 'WERGIN on skat and sheepshead' and this book can be purchased at Amazon.com Wergin On Skat. If you are really serious about learning Skat, this a must-have book. Also Bill Thompson has built a fantastic website with an amazing amount of information about 'The Game' Cleveland Skat Club.On his website, click on 'Pages' then 'Skat School Library' to access the vast amount of information he has collected on the different aspects of the game.

Although this is a Texas Skat website, you will also learn German Skat and the differences between the two. They're basically played exactly the same. The scoring and the rules are slightly different but should not present any big problems. I look forward to receiving input from other players so we can build a treasure chest of knowledge where players of all calibers can come seeking information to improve their skills.