all in card game thành phố Phú Quốc
Trò chơi di động: Mùa lễ hội cầm tay của giải trí đắm chìm
Trong kỷ nguyên thịnh vượng của trò chơi di động, vô số người chơi đắm chìm trong chúng và tận hưởng những trải nghiệm chơi trò chơi đa dạng. Là một công cụ giải trí di động cao cấp, game di động dẫn đầu xu hướng chơi game mới. Hãy đeo tai nghe, cầm điện thoại và thưởng thức trò chơi ngay cả trong một khoảng thời gian ngắn. Không chỉ vậy, game di động còn mang đến nhiều khả năng hơn cho người chơi.
all in card gameTổ tôm

Tổ tôm or Tụ tam bài (chữ Hán: 聚三牌, chữ Nôm: 祖𩵽) is a draw-and-discard card game played in Vietnam, usually by men. The game is often played at festivals. It is derived from the Chinese game of Khanhoo.Regarding the name, some sources say that “tổ tôm” is a mispronunciation of “tụ tam.” “Tụ tam bài” etymologically means ”to gather three cards,” namely the three suits of Văn, Sách, and Vạn of the deck of cards.During holidays and Tết, tổ tôm was often played by men and the elderly because it has some quite difficult rules and many variations, so young uneducated people and women in the past rarely played it. Tổ tôm is not as popular and common as tam cúc.The origin of tổ tôm is still unclear, but by the 19th century in Vietnam, this card game was very popular, especially among the upper class who considered it an elegant game that required a lot of intelligence. Vietnamese literature mentions tổ tôm in a number of literary works, such as this proverb:“Làm trai biết đánh tổ tômUống trà Mạn Hảo xem Nôm Thúy Kiều.”The game uses a type of Chinese money-suited pack consisting of 120 cards (called “quân”). There are three suits (called “hàng,” “chất,” or “hoa”): Cash (文, Văn), Strings of Cash (索, Sách), and Myriads of Strings (萬, Vạn). Each suit is divided into ten ranks (called “số”) from one (一, called “Nhất”) to nine (九, called “Cửu”) with the highest tenth-ranked cards being the Half Cash (called “Chi Chi”), Zero String (called “Không Thang”), and Old Man (called “Ông lão” or “Ông cụ”) respectively. There are four copies of each card unlike its four-suited kin, Bài bất.The cards are made of narrow and long cardboard. One side is plain and the other side has pictures and words. The width of the card is about the width of two fingers. The length is longer than the middle finger.Like the ‘s deck, each card has a decorative picture in the middle that does not relate to the suit or rank. During French colonial rule, the firm A.Camoin & Cie designed the tổ tôm deck depicting people wearing traditional Japanese costumes from the Edo period. Of the cards, 18 depict men (eight of them wearing……

