Hanafuda (1701)

Game Image 419cd83f96bf7ef00196bfc94a7301e1_thb.jpg 🔎
Playtime: 60
Min. Age: 8
Players: 2 - 7
Publisher: Daiso (ダイソー), (Self-Published), Europdesign, Pencil First Games, LLC, Nintendo Co., Ltd., Showa Note Organization (ショウワノート株式会社), Japon Brand, IELLO, Nakayoshi-Mura, Editions Philippe Picquier, Panda Game Manufacturing (PandaGM), Japan Publications, Inc., Hanami, Robin Red Games, Hanafuda Hawaii, LLC, Trefl, The Game Crafter, LLC, Grubbe Media GmbH, Styks, Motobayasi, Square Enix Co., Ltd., Ensky, IndianWolf Studios LLC, AST Publishers, Miracle Fish
Designers: (Uncredited)
Artists: Paul Guo, Vincent Dutrait, Antonietta Fazio-Johnson, Machida Machiko, Kelsey Lynn Cretcher, Pascal Boucher, Sarah Thomas, Ryan Sartor, Kelly McKernan
Mechanics: Push Your Luck, Set Collection, Hand Management

Hanafuda cards originated in beginning of 18th-century Japan.
Legend says stewards of Edo Shogunate created it from Portuguese playing cards.

A deck consists of forty-eight cards divided into twelve suits of four cards each. Each suit represents one of the twelve months of the year or individual plants (almost all flowers).

The cards are small (about 1 x 2 inches), made from stiff cardboard, and are beautifully illustrated.

Many different games can be played with a Hanafuda deck.

The standard game was Hachi-Hachi (Eighty-eight), which resembles the Western game Casino, but is more complicated and subtle. The standard game now is Koi-Koi.

Re-implemented by:

Go Stop, the game using Hwatu (화투, 花闘), Korean Hanafuda.




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ag.gameitem.lastUpdated: 2025-05-18 17:05:34.614