Liar's dice

Last updated

Liar's dice is a class of dice games for two or more players requiring the ability to deceive and to detect an opponent's deception. In "single hand" liar's dice games, each player has a set of dice, all players roll once, and the bids relate to the dice each player can see (their hand) plus all the concealed dice (the other players' hands). In "common hand" games, there is one set of dice which is passed from player to player. The bids relate to the dice as they are in front of the bidder after selected dice have been re-rolled. Originating during the 15th century, the game subsequently spread to Latin American and European countries. In 1993, a variant, Call My Bluff, won the Spiel des Jahres.

Contents

Background

Liar's dice originated as a bluffing board game titled Dudo during the 15th century from the Inca Empire, and subsequently spread to Latin American countries. [1] The game later spread to European countries via Spanish conquistadors. [1] In the 1970s, numerous commercial versions of the game were released. [2]

Single hand

Five six-sided dice are used per player, with dice cups used for concealment. Perudo.jpg
Five six-sided dice are used per player, with dice cups used for concealment.

Five dice are used per player with dice cups used for concealment.

Each round, each player rolls a "hand" of dice under their cup and looks at their hand while keeping it concealed from the other players. The first player begins bidding, announcing any face value and the minimum number of dice that the player believes are showing that value, under all of the cups in the game. Ones are often wild, always counting as the face of the current bid.

Turns rotate among the players in a clockwise order. Each player has two choices during their turn: to make a higher bid, or challenge the previous bid—typically with a call of "liar". Raising the bid means either increasing the quantity, or the face value, or both, according to the specific bidding rules used. There are many variants of allowed and disallowed bids; common bidding variants, given a previous bid of an arbitrary quantity and face value, include:

If the current player challenges the previous bid, all dice are revealed. If the bid is valid (at least as many of the face value and any wild aces are showing as were bid), the bidder wins. Otherwise, the challenger wins. The player who loses a round loses one of their dice. The last player to still retain a die (or dice) is the winner. The loser of the last round starts the bidding on the next round. If the loser of the last round was eliminated, the next player starts the new round.

Dice odds

For a given number of unknown dice n, the probability that exactly a certain quantity q of any face value are showing, P(q), is

Where C(n,q) is the number of unique subsets of q dice out of the set of n unknown dice. In other words, the number of dice with any particular face value follows the binomial distribution .

For the same n, the probability P'(q) that at least q dice are showing a given face is the sum of P(x) for all x such that q ≤ x ≤ n, or

These equations can be used to calculate and chart the probability of exactly q and at least q for any or multiple n. For most purposes, it is sufficient to know the following facts of dice probability:

Common hand

A set of poker dice being rolled behind a screen, played as in the "individual" hand version of liar's dice. Liar Dice.jpg
A set of poker dice being rolled behind a screen, played as in the "individual" hand version of liar's dice.

The "Common hand" version is for two players. The first caller is determined at random. Both players then roll their dice at the same time, and examine their hands. Hands are called in style similar to poker, and the game may be played with poker dice:

CategoryExample
Five of a kind Dice-4-b.svg Dice-4-b.svg Dice-4-b.svg Dice-4-b.svg Dice-4-b.svg
Four of a kind Dice-2-b.svg Dice-2-b.svg Dice-2-b.svg Dice-2-b.svg Dice-5-b.svg
High straight Dice-2-b.svg Dice-3-b.svg Dice-4-b.svg Dice-5-b.svg Dice-6-b.svg
Full house Dice-6-b.svg Dice-6-b.svg Dice-1-b.svg Dice-1-b.svg Dice-1-b.svg
Three of a kind Dice-4-b.svg Dice-4-b.svg Dice-4-b.svg Dice-3-b.svg Dice-2-b.svg
Low straight Dice-1-b.svg Dice-2-b.svg Dice-3-b.svg Dice-4-b.svg Dice-5-b.svg
Two pair Dice-2-b.svg Dice-2-b.svg Dice-5-b.svg Dice-5-b.svg Dice-1-b.svg
Pair Dice-6-b.svg Dice-6-b.svg Dice-5-b.svg Dice-3-b.svg Dice-2-b.svg
Runt Dice-1-b.svg Dice-3-b.svg Dice-4-b.svg Dice-5-b.svg Dice-6-b.svg

One player calls their hand. The other player may either call a higher-ranking hand, call the bluff, or re-roll some or all of their dice.[ clarification needed ] When a bluff is called, the accused bluffer reveals their dice and the winner is determined. [4]

Commercial versions

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">500 (card game)</span> Rules of 500 card game

500 or Five Hundred is a trick-taking game developed in the United States from Euchre. Euchre was extended to a 10 card game with bidding and a Misere contract similar to Russian Preference, producing a good cut-throat three player game like Preference and a four player game played in partnerships like Whist which is the most popular modern form, although with special packs it can be played by up to six players.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bluff (poker)</span> Tactic in poker and other card games

In the card game of poker, a bluff is a bet or raise made with a hand which is not thought to be the best hand. To bluff is to make such a bet. The objective of a bluff is to induce a fold by at least one opponent who holds a better hand. The size and frequency of a bluff determines its profitability to the bluffer. By extension, the phrase "calling somebody's bluff" is often used outside the context of poker to describe situations where one person demands that another proves a claim, or proves that they are not being deceptive.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Skat (card game)</span> German three-player card game

Skat, 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." The German Skat Association assess that it is played by around 25 million Germans – more than play football.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mia (game)</span> Dice game

Mia is a simple dice game with a strong emphasis on bluffing and detecting bluff related to Liar's dice.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Liar's poker</span> American bar game

Liar's poker is an American bar game that combines statistical reasoning with bluffing, and is played with the eight digits of the serial number on U.S. dollar bills. The digits are usually ranked with the 1 as "ace" as the highest value, followed by 0 as "10", down to 2 as the lowest. Each player holds one bill, unseen by the other players. The objective is to guess how often a particular digit appears among all the bills held by all the players. Each guess or bid must be higher in quantity, or equal in quantity but higher in value, than the previous bid. The round ends when all the other players challenge a bid.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Belote</span> Card game

Belote is a 32-card, trick-taking, ace–ten game played primarily in France and certain European countries, namely Armenia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Georgia, Greece, Luxembourg, Moldova, North Macedonia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and also in Saudi Arabia. It is one of the most popular card games in those countries, and the national card game of France, both casually and in gambling. It appeared around 1900 in France, and is a close relative of both Klaberjass and klaverjas. Closely related games are played throughout the world. Definitive rules of the game were first published in French in 1921.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dudo</span> Dice game played in South America, also known as Perudo or ice and dice

Dudo, also known as Cacho, Pico, Perudo, Liar's Dice, Cachito or Dadinho is a popular dice game played in South America. It is a more specific version of a family of games collectively called Liar's Dice, which has many forms and variants. This game can be played by two or more players and consists of guessing how many dice, placed under cups, there are on the table showing a certain number. The player who loses a round loses one of their dice. The last player to still have dice is the winner.

Pedro is an American trick-taking card game of the All Fours family based on Auction Pitch. Its most popular variant is known as Cinch, Double Pedro or High Five which was developed in Denver, Colorado around 1885 and soon regarded as the most important American member of the All Fours family. Although it went out of fashion with the rise of Auction Bridge, it is still widely played on the western coast of the United States and in its southern states, being the dominant game in some locations in Louisiana. Forms of the game have been reported from Nicaragua, the Azores, Niobe NY, Italy and Finland. The game is primarily played by four players in fixed partnerships, but can also be played by 2–6 individual players.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hoity Toity</span> Board game

Hoity Toity is a board game created by Klaus Teuber in 1990.

These terms are used in contract bridge, using duplicate or rubber scoring. Some of them are also used in whist, bid whist, the obsolete game auction bridge, and other trick-taking games. This glossary supplements the Glossary of card game terms.

Ulti, or Ultimó, is Hungary's national trick-taking card game for three players. It is virtually unknown outside its home borders.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Poker dice</span> Type of die

Poker dice are dice which, instead of having number pips, have representations of playing cards upon them. Poker dice have six sides, one each of an Ace, King, Queen, Jack, 10, and 9, and are used to form a poker hand.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">First-price sealed-bid auction</span> Auction where all participants concurrently submit undisclosed bids

A first-price sealed-bid auction (FPSBA) is a common type of auction. It is also known as blind auction. In this type of auction, all bidders simultaneously submit sealed bids so that no bidder knows the bid of any other participant. The highest bidder pays the price that was submitted.

The mathematics of gambling is a collection of probability applications encountered in games of chance and can get included in game theory. From a mathematical point of view, the games of chance are experiments generating various types of aleatory events, and it is possible to calculate by using the properties of probability on a finite space of possibilities.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Twenty-eight (card game)</span> Indian card game

Twenty-eight is an Indian trick-taking card game for four players, in which the Jack and the nine are the highest cards in every suit, followed by ace and ten. It thought to be descended from the game 304, along with similar Indian games known as "29", "40" and "56".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Revenue equivalence</span>

Revenue equivalence is a concept in auction theory that states that given certain conditions, any mechanism that results in the same outcomes also has the same expected revenue.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Glossary of card game terms</span> List of definitions of terms and jargon used in card games

The following is a glossary of terms used in card games. Besides the terms listed here, there are thousands of common and uncommon slang terms. Terms in this glossary should not be game-specific, but apply to a wide range of card games played with non-proprietary packs. It should not include terms solely related to casino or banking games. For glossaries that relate primarily to one game or family of similar games, see Game-specific glossaries.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bieten</span> Card game popular in the Austrian Tyrol and Bavarian Prealps

Bieten, Laubbieten, Lab bietn or Labbieten or Bavarian Poker is a card game that is popular in the Austrian Tyrol and the Bavarian Prealps. It used to be a game frequently played by timber rafters and muleteers. It can be seen as a precursor to the traditional Tyrolean game of Perlaggen. The unusual feature of Bieten is the nature of the competition. The players have the option, even if they have a poor hand, of persuading their opponent(s) to cave in through skilful bidding (Bieten) and bluffing.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bavarian Tarock</span> Card game

Bavarian Tarock or, often, just Tarock, is a card game that was once popular in Bavaria and also played in parts of Austria as well as Berlin. The name is a clue to its origin in the historical German game of [Gross-]Tarock, a game using traditional Tarot cards. At some point in the mid- to late-18th century, attempts were made to emulate Taroc using a standard 36-card German-suited pack, resulting in the formerly popular, south German game of German Tarok. During the last century, the variant played with a pot (Haferl) and often known as Bavarian Tarock or Haferltarock, evolved into "quite a fine game" that, however, has less in common with its Tarock progenitor. German Tarok also generated the very similar game of Tapp, played in Württemberg, and both are related to Bauerntarock, Dobbm and the American games of Frog and Six-Bid Solo. Bavarian Tarock should not be confused with Königrufen, also known as Austrian Tarock or just Tarock.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Illustrated Tarock</span> Austrian card game

Illustrated Tarock or Illustrated Dreiertarock is an Austrian card game that has been described as the "queen" of all three-handed Tarock games played with the 54-card pack. It was thought by Mayr and Sedlaczek to be extinct but, in 2009 when the two Tarock authors were guests on an ORF radio programme, players from Vienna called in who confirmed they still played the game. It is sometimes called Point Tarock which, however, is a different, probably extinct, game, albeit a close cousin. Although it has "a reputation for being a little more convoluted than the others", Furr maintains that this is not so, but recommends that players become familiar with Tapp Tarock before attempting this game.

References

  1. 1 2 Neller, Todd. "Approximating Optimal Dudo Play with Fixed-Strategy Iteration Counterfactual Regret Minimization" (PDF). Gettysburg College, Dept. of Computer Science. Retrieved 2022-11-06.
  2. Taylor, David G. (2021-06-22). Games, Gambling, and Probability: An Introduction to Mathematics. CRC Press. ISBN   978-1-000-40020-5.
  3. Ferguson, Christopher P; Ferguson, Thomas S. "Models for the Game of Liar's Dice" (PDF). University of California at Los Angeles. Retrieved 16 January 2013.
  4. Hoyle's Rules of Games, Third Revised and Updated Edition. Albert H. Morehead and Georffrey Mott-Smith - Revised and Updated by Philip D. Morehead
  5. Woods, Stewart (2012-08-16). Eurogames: The Design, Culture and Play of Modern European Board Games. McFarland. ISBN   978-0-7864-9065-3.
  6. "Bluff". Spiel des Jahres . Retrieved 2022-11-05.
  7. "Preisträger – SPIEL Messe" . Retrieved 2022-11-05.