Want to Help Support PlayingCardHub? - We now have a Patreon page where you can help support PCH for as little as $1 a month - Click here for more details

Berlin Skat

Berlin Skat Card Detail Image

Deck Imagery

Individual Card Imagery for:

Berlin Skat

Images should be 500px wide and 700px tall or in a similar ratio. All images will be converted to JPGs.

Check Taking Good Deck Photos for tips on taking photos and also ensure all photos follow our Terms of Service

If a card image is incorrect - contact our support team and we will remove it

Court Cards

J

Q

K

A

J

Q

K

A

J

Q

K

A

J

Q

K

A

Additional Cards
Joker
Joker Two
Extra One
Extra Two
Extra Three
Extra Four
Extra Five
Extra Six
Club Cards

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

Diamond Cards

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

Heart Cards

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

Spade Cards

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

Photo Gallery For:

Berlin Skat

All images will be converted to JPGs.

Check Taking Good Deck Photos for tips on taking photos and also ensure all photos follow our Terms of Service

This is gallery is not for individual card images - if you'd like to add those - you can do that here

If you feel an image in this gallery is inappropriate - contact our support team and we will review it

Suggest New Front/Back Images for:

Berlin Skat

All images will be converted to JPGs.

Check Taking Good Deck Photos for tips on taking photos and also ensure all photos follow our Terms of Service

If you feel a decks front or back image is inappropriate - contact our support team and we will review it

Berlin Skat

User Rating:
This deck is currently in:
0
Collections
0
Wishlists
0
Trade Lists
Description

For over a century until 1996, F.X. Schmid was an important German manufacturer of playing cards (traditional card games and quartets), board games and puzzles. It was considered one of the major European manufacturers. In 1995, its turnover was 67 million DM and there were around 250 employees. The publishing house has been a wholly-owned subsidiary of Ravensburger since 1996. The name F.X. Schmid is used today in the field of children's books and playing cards by Ravensburger. Skat (German pronunciation: [ˈskaːt] historically Scat, is a three-player trick-taking card game of the Ace-Ten family, devised around 1810 in Altenburg in the Duchy of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg. It is the national game of Germany and, along with Doppelkopf, it is the most popular card game in Germany and Silesia and one of the most popular in the rest of Poland. A variant of 19th century Skat was once popular in the US. John McLeod considers it one of the best and most interesting card games for three players, and Kelbet described it as "the king of German card games Skat was developed by the members of a local Tarock club, the Brommesche Tarok-Gesellschaft between 1810 and 1817 in Altenburg, in what is now the State of Thuringia, Germany. It is based on the three-player game of Tarock, also known as Tarot, and the four-player game of Schafkopf (equivalent to the American game Sheepshead). It has become the most loved and widely played German card game, especially in German-speaking regions. In the earliest known form of the game, the player in the first seat was dealt twelve cards and the other two players ten each. He then made two discards, constituting the Skat, and announced a contract. But the main innovation of this new game was that of the bidding process. The first book on the rules of Skat, Das Scatspiel: Nebst zwei Liedern, was published in 1848 by one of its inventors, secondary school teacher J. F. L. Hempel. Nevertheless, the rules continued to differ from one region to another until the first attempt to set them in order was made by a congress of Skat players on 7 August 1886 in Altenburg. These were the first official rules finally published in a book form in 1888 by Theodor Thomas of Leipzig. The current rules, followed by both the International Skat Players Association, German Skat Federation, and British Skat Association, date from Jan. 1, 1999. The word Skat is a Tarok term derived from the Latin word scarto, scartare, which means to discard or reject, and its derivative scatola, a box or a place for safe-keeping. The word scarto is still used in some other Italian card games to this day. Skat is completely unrelated to an American game called Scat.

Company
F. X. Schmid
Edition
-
Release Year
-
Production Run
-
Card Size
Bridge
Court Cards
Custom
Card Stock
-
Printer
F. X. Schmid
Artist
-
Barcode
-
Card Styles
-
Card Fronts
Card Backs

See This Deck on Other Sites

As the hub for playing card enthusiasts, we make it easy to explore, discover, and track decks no matter where they’re found.

DeckCollect Icon View On DeckCollect
Kickstarter Icon View On Kickstarter
View On CardScans (PiWigo)

Historical Fields

For collectors of historical and/or Congress decks - these fields may be of additional value

Extra/Ad Card(s)
No
Joker(s)
No
Name of Back Design
-
Date Code
-
Matching Joker
-
Ace Coding
-
Tax Stamp
-

PlayingCardHub Community Reviews

Loading Reviews...

Card Database

Suggest Data Edits

Do you like Berlin Skat? - You might also like:

Berlin 55 Verscheidene Motive Front Thumbnail Image
Princess Cruises - Teal Front Thumbnail Image
Skat "Auslese" Französ. Clubbild Front Thumbnail Image
I ❤️ Berlin Front Thumbnail Image
Waldkater Front Thumbnail Image
Noah's Lost Ark Front Thumbnail Image
Rixdorf Front Thumbnail Image
Ampelmann Front Thumbnail Image