Court Piece : Rung Play

Court Piece : Rung Play

Published by: OENGINES GAMES LLP

Description

Court Piece is sometimes written as Coat Piece or Coat Pees, Pees being a Hindi word meaning to deal.this game is often known as Rang or Rung, which means trump. In some places, for example in Goa, it is called Seven Hands: in India the English word "hand" is sometimes used to mean a "trick". one card played to the table by each player in turn, these cards being won by the player of the highest card.
The word Court, Coat, Kot or Kout occurs in many South Asian games and is also found as far away as Somalia and Malaysia.
There are four players in fixed partnerships, partners sitting opposite. Deal and play are anticlockwise.
A standard international pack is used, the cards in each suit ranking from high to low A-K-Q-J-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2.
The first dealer is chosen at random. Subsequently the dealer is always a member of the team that lost the previous deal.
The dealer shuffles and the player to dealer's right, known as the "trump-caller", cuts. The dealer deals a batch of five cards to each player. The trump-caller player looks at his or her five cards and chooses and announces the trump suit. Then the dealer deals out all the remaining cards in batches of four, so that everyone has 13 cards.
he player to dealer's right leads any card to the first trick. Players must follow suit if possible: if unable they may play any card. When all four players have contributed a card the player of the highest card of the suit that was led wins the trick unless one or more cards of the trump suit were played, in which case the highest trump wins. The player who won the trick leads any card to the next trick.
Completed tricks are stacked neatly face down in front of one of the players of the team who won them, so that everyone can see how many tricks each team has won.
The object of the game is to score courts (coats, kots) by winning the majority of the tricks.
1) The team that wins at least seven of the thirteen tricks (hands) wins the deal, and a team that wins seven deals in succession scores a court
The dealer is always a player from the team that lost the previous deal, so that the winners of the previous deal call trumps. The next dealer is determined as follows:
1) If the dealer's team wins the deal, the player to the dealer's right deals next.
2) If the trump-caller's team wins the deal, but does not score a court, the same dealer deals again.
3) If the trump-caller's team scores a court, the deal passes to the partner of the previous dealer.
If the dealers team wins the first seven(7) tricks, this is sometimes known as a goon court.
A team that scores a court by winning the first seven tricks can carry on and try to win all 13 tricks. This is known as a 52-court or a bavney.
**** COURT PIECE FEATURES ****
WELCOME BONUS COINS ***
Get 1,00,000 bonus coins as a Welcome Bonus, and get even more coins by collecting your “Daily Bonus” every day!
**** THREE MODE ****
1. Single Sar (Single Trick): Game will be played with all basic rules.
2. Double Sar (Double Trick): Player must have to win two consecutive tricks until then the tricks pile up in the center. When a player does win two consecutive tricks, that player takes all the cards from the center.
3. Double Sar With Ace: Player who wins two consecutive tricks with aces is not entitled to pick them up. The trick with the second Ace is not counted as a winning trick.
**** GAME FEATURES ****
-Interactive UI and animation effects.
-Court Piece Offline have also Leader board that is available for competing with other world-wide players. Game center is helping to find out the player's position on the leader board.
-Weekly quests available with existing deals to get extra bonus.
-Daily and time-based bonus in-game for more interesting.
-Easy Controls to users can easily take and throw cards from suits.
-Court Piece Offline brings this classic 4-player contract trick-taking card game, it is similar to the card game "Call It Right".
Court Piece is a trick-taking card game
Have fun.
Hide Show More...

In-Apps

Remove Ads
900.00 Rs
Coins Pack 1
300.00 Rs
Coins Pack 2
500.00 Rs
Coins Pack 3
900.00 Rs
Coins Pack 4
1,100.00 Rs
Coins Pack 5
1,300.00 Rs
Coins Pack 6
1,700.00 Rs
Coins Pack 7
1,900.00 Rs
Coins Pack 8
2,200.00 Rs
Special Offer
2,500.00 Rs

Screenshots

Court Piece FAQ

  • Is Court Piece free?

    Yes, Court Piece is free to download, however it contains in-app purchases or subscription offerings.

  • Is Court Piece legit?

    Not enough reviews to make a reliable assessment. The app needs more user feedback.

    Thanks for the vote

  • How much does Court Piece cost?

    Court Piece has several in-app purchases/subscriptions, the average in-app price is 1,330.00 Rs.

  • What is Court Piece revenue?

    To get estimated revenue of Court Piece app and other AppStore insights you can sign up to AppTail Mobile Analytics Platform.

User Rating

4.41 out of 5

140 ratings in Pakistan

5 star
107
4 star
9
3 star
10
2 star
2
1 star
12
Ratings History

Court Piece Reviews

Fake Rule of the game

Pwncshani on

Pakistan

Too Many Ads Ads irritated please Make sure real Rule in Game…

Players not up to mark for Double Trick game !!!

INVINCIBLE_1214 on

Pakistan

Too many adds. Also game is very frustrating for players who like Double Trick Rung. Most of the players play with single trick mentality and have no basic understanding of Double trick game.

Too much adds

Mani21246842 on

Pakistan

Too much adds

Ads

most favv app on

Pakistan

Too much ads.

Store Rankings

Ranking History
App Ranking History not available yet
Category Rankings
App is not ranked yet

Court Piece Competitors

Court Piece Installs

Last 30 days

Court Piece Revenue

Last 30 days

Court Piece Revenue and Downloads

Gain valuable insights into Court Piece performance with our analytics.
Sign up now to access downloads, revenue, and more.

App Info

Category
Games
Publisher
OENGINES GAMES LLP
Languages
English
Recent release
1.6 (1 year ago )
Released on
Jun 10, 2021 (3 years ago )
Last Updated
4 weeks ago
This page includes copyrighted content from third parties, shared solely for commentary and research in accordance with fair use under applicable copyright laws. All trademarks, including product, service, and company names or logos, remain the property of their respective owners. Their use here falls under nominative fair use as outlined by trademark laws and does not suggest any affiliation with or endorsement by the trademark holders.