<strong>Bauernfangen</strong> is an old trick-taking card game for 4 to 5 players, which used to be very popular in the Upper Austrian region of Hausruckviertel.
<strong>Canasta</strong> (from Spanish canasta: basket) is a card game for four players in two partnerships; there are also variants for two, three, five or six people
<strong>Deutsches Solo</strong> or <strong>Solo</strong> for short is a simplified version of the Spanish card game <strong>L'Hombre</strong>, but for four players.
<strong>Durak</strong> (Russian Дура́к Durák, German 'fool') is a traditional Russian card game. The aim of the game is to get rid of all the cards as quickly as possible after the deck has been used up.
<strong>Elfern</strong>, formerly also Eilfern or figure game, in Austria Elfmandeln, is a traditional card game for two people, which is played with the Skat hand
<strong>Poker</strong> is the name of a family of card games, usually played with Anglo-American 52-card poker cards, in which a hand (poker hand) is made up of five cards.
<strong>Schwarzer Peter</strong> is one of the most popular card games for children along with quartet. It's a negative game: if you can't pass the eponymous card on, you lose.
<strong>Schwimmen</strong> or thirty-one is a card game of chance for two to nine players. The name Thirty-One also denotes a precursor to Seventeen and Four, where 31 points instead of 21 is the best result.
<strong>Skat</strong> is a card game for three players. It is an imperfect information strategy game that also has a gambling element by shuffling the cards before dealing.