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Horse Racing Cards Drinking Game

  • The Horse Race drinking game is a very fun one, where players gamble on what suit of cards will essentially win a 'horse race', where the Ace from each suit progresses by cards from their suit being randomly drawn by the 'announcer'.
  • Get the best deals for vintage horse racing game at eBay.com. We have a great online selection at the lowest prices with Fast & Free shipping on many items!
  • To begin you will need a standard deck of 52 playing cards. You need to remove the Kings as well as the Jokers for this game to work. The dealer will deal a card to each player until the entire deck has been dealt. Some players will receive more cards than others – which is fine.
  • All players holding cards corresponding to the winning horse are winners! For each winning card, winners collect 25% of the pot. (Example: if horse 10 wins the race, all players holding a 10 card in their hand collect 25% of the pot. If a player holds two 10 cards, they would collect 50% of the pot, three 10 cards would collect 75% and four 10.

Horse Race Game To play, you need a pair of dice, a deck of cards, and the Horse Race game board! From the deck of cards, discard the aces, kings, and jokers, leaving you with 44 cards. Shuffle and deal these cards. Each player will not necessarily receive the same amount of cards.

  • Basic Horse Race
  • Calcutta Horse Race

Introduction

This is a gambling game for three or more players. The horses are represented by the four Aces that race along the course according to the suits of cards turned by the dealer. At the start of the race players bet on the outcome.

In the traditional version of the game the dealer sets the odds, takes the players' bets and pays those who bet on the winner. Roland Scheicher has suggested an alternative version of the game, Calcutta Horse Race, in which the horses are auctioned to the players at the start of each race and the owners of the first and second placed horses share the pool.

Basic Horse Race

Players and equipment

Three or more people can play. One standard 52-card pack without jokers is used. The players will also need chips or money for betting.

Layout

The dealer extracts the four aces from the deck and places them in a column. The cards are then shuffled and cut, and the dealer deals seven cards face up in a horizontal row along the top of the layout to mark out the course as shown in the diagram.

If there are five or more cards of the same suit in the top row, the cards are reshuffled, cut and dealt again, since it would be impossible for the horse of that suit to win.

Betting

The dealer sets the odds on each horse. The odds need to be long enough to encourage the players to bet but short enough to give the dealer a reasonable chance to make a profit. Clearly the more often a suit appears in the top row, the less likely it is that the horse of that suit will win. Some sources suggest the following odds, according to the number of cards of the suit that are showing:

  • 0 cards: evens
  • 1 card: 2-1
  • 2 cards: 3-1
  • 3 cards: 5-1
  • 4 cards: 10-1

The dealer also determines the limit on the size of bets that are allowed. Players now place their bets beside the Aces they wish to bet on.

Horse Race Card Game Drinking

Race and Payoff

The dealer deals cards from the remainder of the deck one at a time face up onto a pile. Each time a card is dealt, the horse of that suit moves one space to the right along the course. The first horse to cross the finish line (which will happen when eight cards of that suit have been dealt) wins the race. The dealer pays out the bets on the winning horse and collects the bets on the others. It is then the next player's turn to deal.

Variants

The length of the course can be varied. For example in the version described in Scarne on Cards (1965), only six cards are dealt to mark out the course, and a horse only has to reach, not cross the finishing line to win, so only six cards of the suit are needed. Even if all six cards marking the course are of the same suit six more cards of that suit remain, making it possible though unlikely that the corresponding Ace will win, so it is never necessary to redeal the cards.

Calcutta Horse Race

Roland Scheicher contributed this version, which is modelled on the Calcutta auctions held at horse races such as the Melbourne Cup. It can be played by three or more players and the recommended number of players is around 6 to 8. Each player begins with an equal quantity of chips, say 150.

Deal

The cards are cut to choose the first dealer - highest card deals. In this version the dealer acts as auctioneer but has no advantage over the other players. The dealer may take part in the auction, or with a larger number of players, it may be more fun for the dealer to stay out of the bidding and just concentrate on selling the horses and running the race.

The dealer removes the four Aces, the remainder of the pack is shuffled and cut, and the dealer deals a row of seven cards face up to mark the length of the course. If five or more cards of the same suit are dealt, the cards are gathered up, shuffled again and redealt.

To make it clearer which horses have an advantage, the row of seven cards is sorted into suits, with the suit that has most cards on the left, then the suit with the next most cards, and so on.

The Auction

The horses (Aces) are now auctioned off one at a time starting with the longshots - the horses that have the lowest chance to win. (That is the order in which horses are auctioned off at the Melbourne Cup, where Calcutta auctions are especially popular.) So the first horse to be auctioned will be the leftmost suit, since it has most cards along the top of the course, and therefore the least cards remaining in the pack to move the horse forwards.

The dealer is the auctioneer. The dealer announces the horse to be auctioned and accepts bids from the players. Players may bid in any order. Bids must be a whole number of chips, the minimum being 1 chip, and each bid must be higher than the previous one. When no one is willing to bid higher, the dealer declares the horse sold. The highest bidder pays the amount of the final bid into the pool and the dealer/auctioneer gives the relevant Ace to the buyer as proof of ownership of the horse.

Race and Payoff

When all four horses have been auctioned the race begins. The dealer deals cards one at a time from the deck face up onto the table. The first card is placed below the leftmost card of the row marking the length of the course, to show that the horse of that suit has moved forward one space. Subsequent cards of the same suit continue the row for that horse to the right. When a new suit appears, the card is placed in the left column to start a new row for that suit. After a few cards have been dealt the layout might look like this:

In this example Clubs was the first horse to start, but has now been overtaken by Hearts. The Spade horse has not yet moved.

Further cards are dealt until two horses have passed the finish line, i.e. until two of the suit rows contain eight (or more) cards each, the eighth card being just to the right of the finish line.

The owner of the horse that finishes first takes two thirds of the chips form the pool, and the owner of the second horse takes the remaining third. If the amount of chips in the pool is not divisible by three, the winnings are rounded to the nearest whole number: if there is a remainder of one chip the winner takes it, and if there is a remainder of two chips the owners of the first and second horses take one of these chips each.

After the pool as been paid out, the turn to deal passes to the next player to the left.

Horse Race Drinking Game was submitted by Zara, South East London, England.

OVERVIEW of the Horse Race Drinking Game:

The Horse Race Drinking Game is probably one of the most unique games you’ll find inside the bible. And once you have a handle on the rules… It’s a FANTASTIC game to play.

Also, having an amazing commentator helps!

If you’ve never gambled before then this is the game for you to finally start. There’s no money involved… Only alcohol. You bet with alcohol!! Is there anything better!?

Be careful with who you dish out your “winnings” to because it could come back to you. But we all love drinking so is it really a bad thing?

Horse Racing Cards Drinking Game

So saddle up, pick your “horse” and happy drinking!

Here’s What You Need:

  • Alcohol
  • An enthusiastic commentator
  • A deck of card
  • Space to lay out all the cards
  • Optional: Have “William Tell Overture Finale by Rossini” playing in the background

The Rules:

Horse Racing Card Game

In a horse race, everyone picks a suit (the horse) and places their bets, in seconds, on whatever suit they like. You drink for the amount of seconds you’d like to bet which you then get to double and dish out at the end if your horse wins. As a group, you can decide if there is a maximum bet.

Once all bets are placed you lay out the course like in the picture below.

With all 4 aces as the horses, you start the game by turning over the next card on the deck. Whatever suit appears when turning the deck over that horse moves forward one place.

If all the horses make it past a row on the course, you turn the card over. Whatever suit the card is that horse moves back one space.

Keep playing until a horse crosses the finish line. Winning players can then dish out their drinks.

THE RULES IN BITE SIZE CHUNKS:

  • Players place bets on which suit they think will win. You drink for X amount of seconds, that is your bet. If your horse wins, you get to double your bet and deal out that many seconds to the other players.
  • Set your course up like in the image below.
  • You have 9 cards on the side making up the course and then 4 random cards of 4 different suits as the horses.
  • Someone starts turning the rest of the deck over one card at a time. Whatever suit is turned over, that horse moves forward one space.
  • Once all the horses have passed one of the cards in the track, that card in the track is turned over. Whatever suit that card is, that horse moves back one space.
  • The first horse to pass the finish line is the winner. The players with the winning horse double their bet and dish out the seconds to the losing players.

Horse Racing Cards Drinking Game Board

Game

Additional Rules

Horse Racing Drinking Game Cards

  • Bets can be fingers or seconds. Players decide at the start.
  • Cheering for your horse is encouraged!