![]() If your partner has taken many more tricks than they bid and you still have many strong cards in your hand you will want to lay low to come just under winning tricks.Pay attention to your group bid between your partner and you.Leading a suit a competitor does not have gives them flexibility.Leading a suit you know your partner does not have gives them flexibility.If you pay attention to which cards have been thrown you can see when some players do not have certain suits.You typically do not want to take tricks from your partner unless you have a great next lay or you already met your joint bid goal and you are trying to get rid of trick winning cards.If your opponent bids nil you will generally want to lay low cards in suits you believe they still have so you can try to get them to take a trick.This game is perhaps the opposite of our other Spades card game, where in the other game the computer opponents make going nil quite easy.The computer teammate in this game does not play the way a human teammate would when you go nil & that often leads to you getting shredded.Further, they will typically throw higher valued cards out so that it is easy for you to get under them. For instance, if they see you discard a number of low cards in a suit they might keep playing that suit. When you go nil with a human partner your partner will read your cards and play based off of them.If you have many bags it can make sense to bid more aggressively.If you are about to win the game and do not have many bags it makes sense to bid more conservatively.You can bid aggressive with Aces, King protected with a lower suited card, and for hands where you have few or no of one suit and many Spades.In general it is best to bid about 1 trick less than how many you think you can take, so that if something does not go your way you can still make your bid.If you and your partner bid a combined 7 tricks but only take 6 you’ve failed to meet your bid goal & you score -10 for every trick you bid, meaning you would lose 70 points on the hand.When you get 10 bags 100 points are subtracted from your score.If you score more tricks than you bid the extra tricks are called bags and are scored as 1 point each.This means if your partner bids 3 and you bid 4 then you would still meet the bid requirement if the partner took 6 tricks and you took 1. ![]() Other than when you go nil your trick bid is summed with your partners and you are scored together as a team.If you bid zero and take zero tricks you score 100 points. ![]()
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