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What are your favorite card games?

PostPosted: Wed Oct 05, 2022 3:11 am
by chahinazsie
Today's discussion is all about card games. Specifically, games are predominantly card based, not just one of several design elements. Whether the game uses poker-sized cards, mini-euro cards, tarot cards, or even just a standard 52-card deck, tell us what your favorite card games are and what keeps them returning to your gaming table.

Feel free to reply to suggestions here and add your thoughts or even other recommendations for people you think would like the games already recommended.

Re: What are your favorite card games?

PostPosted: Wed Oct 05, 2022 3:26 am
by florindooff
I like to play solitaire during my breaks in the University. It's a great way to pass your time while training your brain too. Back in the day we used to gather and play with my friends as kids solitaire with actual cards. It was great fun and apart from other card games we enjoyed the interaction. Now I'm playing more spider solitaire free online rather than meeting with anyone. The interface of this site is amazing as well.

Re: What are your favorite card games?

PostPosted: Thu Oct 06, 2022 1:43 am
by stoianracing
I love Roll for the Galaxy, but for some reason Race is really intimidating to me. Anytime I open the rulebook, I feel like I'm studying for a test I missed the lecture on.

Re: What are your favorite card games?

PostPosted: Tue Oct 11, 2022 12:22 am
by GrantWorkman
Although I never played many card games my favorite was something called gurka. It’s very popular in northern Europe and has a bezillions variations throughout the Nordic countries. I believe it’s also called cucumber.

Re: What are your favorite card games?

PostPosted: Wed Oct 12, 2022 7:50 am
by tlerionaz
I like to play poker. I found the bovada gaming platform and here are favorable conditions for gaming. Poker is a mind game. And it's very fun to play. You can explore bovada review poker yourself and play here at any time.

Re: What are your favorite card games?

PostPosted: Sat Oct 15, 2022 2:46 am
by moroteron
I really like card solitaire games. It relaxes and gives you time to think about many things in life.

Re: What are your favorite card games?

PostPosted: Sat Oct 15, 2022 2:50 am
by soveronder
I really enjoy playing bitcoin live blackjack here https://winz.io/games/live-blackjack. The great thing about blackjack, and other card games is that they provide a new challenge each time you play. That makes it an ideal way to keep your mind sharp and brain active.

Re: What are your favorite card games?

PostPosted: Sun Oct 23, 2022 6:31 pm
by shark0175
My favorite card game is UNO. It's fun to play with friends.

Re: What are your favorite card games?

PostPosted: Wed Oct 26, 2022 12:07 am
by tomusa
My favorite game is: krunker. It belongs to the gun game genre and is very hot right now

Re: What are your favorite card games?

PostPosted: Wed Oct 26, 2022 10:35 am
by aale
UNO ))))

Re: What are your favorite card games?

PostPosted: Wed Nov 09, 2022 7:44 pm
by laurawoods
Werewolf is a very popular card game in the world right now.

Re: What are your favorite card games?

PostPosted: Sun Jan 25, 2026 10:36 am
by Sonya344
For the longest time, I convinced myself that bad sessions were just the result of unlucky cards or unfortunate runouts. I blamed variance for swings and shrugged off losses, assuming they were inevitable. But after weeks of repeating patterns in my results, it hit me that luck wasn’t the real problem. My approach had serious gaps, and if I wanted to progress, I needed a structured, data-driven method to understand my own play. That realization led me to professional online poker coaching with a focus on deep statistical analysis. Going through my complete hand history with baseanalise.com was a revelation. For the first time, I could see patterns that had been invisible in real time: hands I habitually overplayed, situations where my bet sizing was inconsistent, and spots where I misread opponents in ways I hadn’t even noticed. It wasn’t one dramatic mistake here or there — it was hundreds of small, repeated decisions quietly eroding my long-term win rate. As I worked through these insights, I began adjusting my strategy incrementally. I learned to tighten up in marginal spots, apply pressure selectively, and think more carefully about ranges and position. Suddenly, sessions stopped feeling like a gamble. Decisions that once left me guessing became deliberate, backed by clear reasoning. The shift was immediate: my play became sharper, swings less punishing, and the mental exhaustion that often followed tough sessions diminished, because every move was grounded in analysis rather than guesswork.