Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - Name " 百ひゃく人にん一いっ首しゅ" Japanese card game *specific *description and *playing

Name " 百ひゃく人にん一いっ首しゅ" Japanese card game *specific *description and *playing

※ Hundred Hiku Nin Ichi (ひゃくにんいっ首しゅ), a collection of 100 outstanding Japanese waka (和歌) songs from the seven centuries of Japanese history, is the most popular collection of waka (和歌). In the Edo period, it was made into kaluta (koryudo, i.e., paper cards; also known as song cards) and began to circulate among the people. Especially as a New Year's game, it has been popular and has been passed down from generation to generation, and has become a household name. Over the centuries, it has had a profound impact on the Japanese people's lifestyle and aesthetic sense.

※ Karuta is a Japanese card game. It is a Japanese card game in which a song is written on a card with the words "One hundred people, one song". The player uses a card with only the next line written on it, and listens to the person reading the card read the first line to find the card that corresponds to it. This refers specifically to competitive songs. There can be a team game (5 players, usually with trumps in the 1, 3, and 5 positions) or an individual game (1v1).

Goludo is a fun and difficult game, and can be considered an old Japanese board game. It is a fun and difficult game, and is one of the oldest Japanese board games. It focuses on the following skills:

1. Memorization of the starting words (the starting words are the words at the beginning of the first line of the song. Because there are only one hundred waka for one hundred people, there is a range, so you usually don't need to hear all of the previous sentence to determine which waka it is and what the next sentence is, so it is crucial to memorize the starting characters.) ;

2. Position of the cards (The position of the cards is where the cards are placed on the tatami mat. Usually before the game starts, the two players place their cards as they see fit and then memorize the positions of all 50 cards. Then the positions of the cards change during the game with mistakes and offenses, and that's when they're all memorized as well.)

3, memorize the cards that have been read, etc.

4, reflexes (the moment you hear the starting word quickly judge and then make a move);

5, the handling of the cards sent (to send a card is to choose one or two from your own cards to give to the game opponent, who will then place the cards in the position they prefer. When the opponent has a mistake, or grabbed the opponent's card can be sent to the opponent. Since the rule of the game is that the first person to have no cards of their own wins, giving away cards to the opponent is good for them and bad for them.) ;

6. Proximity outside acceleration;

7. Physical strength.

Highlights- The content of the waka can be searched within Baidu's encyclopedia, "(Japanese) Kokura Hyakunin a song, carefully collected and organized, all note with kana"