Page:Foster's Russian bank; a card game for two players (second edition).djvu/13

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INTRODUCTION
ix

than Pinochle, but sufficient intellectual exercise to satisfy both the average and the most exacting card player.

Russian Bank is a gradual development from various forms of Solitaire, especially one which has been known since 1910 as Crapette, which seems to be a coined word. The game provides excellent training for both observation and judgment and has many surprising alternatives, owing to the infinite possibilities of the distribution of two packs of fifty-two cards each. It is impossible for any two games of Russian Bank to be even remotely alike, and even with exactly the same distribution of the cards the outcome may vary in countless ways. Another point in its favor is that each player is as much concerned in his opponent’s moves as in