Skull King: Ayer jugué a este juego, y un amigo aseguraba que era " La Pocha", no lo sé pero ciertamente es un juego basado en clásicos
Hombres lobo de castronegro: La verdad que es un juego que lleva mucho tiempo en el mercado y no se qué vino antes, si el poli/ladrón de la baraja española o este título (También conocido como Mafia, juego popular ruso, o eso dice la leyenda xP)
Tichu was derived from a Chinese game that has been around for at least 30 years and possibly much more than that. But I haven't been able to find any source that estimates how old it might be.The source game is called Zheng Shangyou, which can be translated as "struggling upstream". The Western world was made aware of it in 1979, during a visit to China by some British Go players. Zheng Shangyou is a climbing game, so players must play a card combination of the same type as the leader, but higher ranked. However, points aren't scored by winning cards, but only for going out first. It can be played solo or with partners. There are a number of other differences, but it would certainly be recognizable to any Tichu player.There is a related Chinese game called Zheng Fen, which has point scoring cards identical to Tichu's. Interestingly, the types of card combinations that can be made in this game seem very similar to the ones in the commercial game Gang of Four (which has yet another way of scoring points, namely the number of cards left in your hand).As far as I can tell, Tichu designer Urs Hostettler took a number of concepts from several Chinese games and possibly added a few of his own to come up with Tichu. So he deserves credit for creating the game that we know and love. But the games it was derived from have been played for quite a while--I just don't know how far back they go.
CitarTichu was derived from a Chinese game that has been around for at least 30 years and possibly much more than that. But I haven't been able to find any source that estimates how old it might be.The source game is called Zheng Shangyou, which can be translated as "struggling upstream". The Western world was made aware of it in 1979, during a visit to China by some British Go players. Zheng Shangyou is a climbing game, so players must play a card combination of the same type as the leader, but higher ranked. However, points aren't scored by winning cards, but only for going out first. It can be played solo or with partners. There are a number of other differences, but it would certainly be recognizable to any Tichu player.There is a related Chinese game called Zheng Fen, which has point scoring cards identical to Tichu's. Interestingly, the types of card combinations that can be made in this game seem very similar to the ones in the commercial game Gang of Four (which has yet another way of scoring points, namely the number of cards left in your hand).As far as I can tell, Tichu designer Urs Hostettler took a number of concepts from several Chinese games and possibly added a few of his own to come up with Tichu. So he deserves credit for creating the game that we know and love. But the games it was derived from have been played for quite a while--I just don't know how far back they go.Vamos que se sabe que el tichu si deriva de otros jugos,... pero no precisamente de mallorca.
Cita de: ChusoClown en 23 de Febrero de 2017, 13:10:19 Skull King: Ayer jugué a este juego, y un amigo aseguraba que era " La Pocha", no lo sé pero ciertamente es un juego basado en clásicosEs una reimplementación de Wizards y si, es una Pocha con esteroides
Jungle speed: No es la primera vez que enseño este juego a alguien y me dicen, aaanda, si a esto jugaba yo en los campamentos, aparte tiene un olorcillo a "burro" autentico clásico.