Flinch (card game)

The game of Flinch.

Flinch is a card game that was invented in 1901 by A.J. Patterson.

Patterson grew up on a farm in Eaton County, Michigan, and graduated high school at the age of sixteen. He moved from job to job in Grand Rapids and Chicago before he finally settled in Kalamazoo, Michigan as a bookkeeper at a stationery store, Beecher & Kymer.

At home one day while he was playing cards, he came up with the idea for Flinch. He decided to create the game and the deck. Later, he ran the Flinch Card Company out of the stationery store, that was renamed Beecher, Kymer, & Patterson.

About the game

Flinch is a card game that is based on stockpiling. The game is played with a custom deck and was first produced by the Flinch Card Company in Kalamazoo. This custom deck has 150 cards: ten sets of cards numbered from one to fifteen. Some variations use a deck that has 144 cards. Flinch is based on another game called "Spite and Malice".

Buying the game

Although it is not as popular today as it was when it was originally released, Flinch decks are still available online and in stores. Websites such as Amazon, Yahoo, and The Find all offer different versions of the deck. Some decks are vintage, from the original printing in 1901 and are being sold for around $40.00 while others are from re-prints or copies. These versions can sell anywhere from $4.00 up to $15.00.

Rules of play

Three different box designs

For example, if the first player's face-up card is a seven, it can be placed on another player's six or eight. If the player is able to get rid of their face-up card in one of these ways, they turn up their next card and attempt to discard it using the same methods. This continues until the player is unable to discard any more cards. The next player does the same.

Challenging("Flinch!"): On each turn players must first play from the Stockpile if possible. If they fail to do so, any opponent may call "Flinch!" Any player so challenged must stop playing immediately, draw the top card from the Stockpile of the opponent who issued the challenge, and place it at thebottom of his/her own Stockpile.

You may also challenge an opponent if you believe the opponent is holding a 1 card in his/her hand after it should have been played. If you are correct, the player challenged is penalized as above; if not, the challenger draws the penalty.

A player who is challenged and penalized ends his/her turn and does not discard to his/her Reserve Piles on that turn. If two players issue a challenge at the same time, the challenger nearest to the left of the challenged player receives the credit or penalty for the challenge.

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, March 09, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.