You are allowed to knock over the center pin with your first card, as long as you don't do it on its own, but take along at least one adjacent card along with it.
I've played this a lot in the (distant) past with regular playing cards. Great solitaire game. Looks like it'll be more fun with the print-and-play bowling pin cards. Where did you get the images?
Magic! :-) Nah, I need to edit my videos, cut out some text and thinking time. If I touched or moved some cards between those cuts the seem to move magically. I‘m not happy with this effect, but it‘s better than having lots of downtime or keeping in my slips of tongue...
You are allowed to knock over the center pin with your first card, as long as you don't do it on its own, but take along at least one adjacent card along with it.
Yes. Wrong rules interpretation here. Need to make a caption sometime. Thanks!
Thanks for making this video by the way!
Great Game! Thanks for Explanation
I've played this a lot in the (distant) past with regular playing cards. Great solitaire game. Looks like it'll be more fun with the print-and-play bowling pin cards. Where did you get the images?
James Sharp Git them from Grail Games. But they´re not official (yet?).
@@Lines42 Are they still available? I'd love a copy but couldn't find them on the site.
Best you contact Grail Games. This was initially released and in the same box with their game „Elevenses for one“.
wait why couldn't he play the 12 with the 9 and 3 in the second frame?
Jip, could have done that. Oversight... too much talking while doing math :-(
Ok am I the only one who saw those cards move on there own
Magic!
:-)
Nah, I need to edit my videos, cut out some text and thinking time. If I touched or moved some cards between those cuts the seem to move magically. I‘m not happy with this effect, but it‘s better than having lots of downtime or keeping in my slips of tongue...