Scarney refers to several
abstract strategy game
An abstract strategy game is a type of strategy game that has minimal or no narrative theme, an outcome determined only by player choice (with minimal or no randomness), and in which each player has perfect information about the game. For example ...
s invented by
John Scarne
John Scarne (; March 4, 1903 – July 7, 1985) was an American magician and author who was particularly adept at playing card manipulation. He became known as an expert on cards and other games, and authored a number of popular books on cards, ...
starting in the late 1920s, released with names referencing the inventor, including Scarnie, Scar-Nee, Scarney 3000, and Skarney. Although they bear similar names, they may be grouped into three general types, each with distinct rules and gameplay:
#
Board game
A board game is a type of tabletop game that involves small objects () that are placed and moved in particular ways on a specially designed patterned game board, potentially including other components, e.g. dice. The earliest known uses of the ...
s: Scarnie, Scar-Nee, I.Q. Solitaire, Scarney
#
Dice game
Dice games are games that use or incorporate one or more dice as their sole or central component, usually as a random device.
The following are games which largely, if not entirely, depend on dice:
Collectible dice games
Patterned after the su ...
s: Scarney Dice, Scarney 3000
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Card game
A card game is any game that uses playing cards as the primary device with which the game is played, whether the cards are of a traditional design or specifically created for the game (proprietary). Countless card games exist, including famil ...
s: Skarney, Skarney Kards
Unlike Scarne's contemporaneous game ''
Teeko
Teeko is an abstract strategy game invented by John Scarne in 1937 and rereleased in refined form in 1952 and again in the 1960s. Teeko was marketed by Scarne's company, John Scarne Games Inc.; its quirky name, he said, borrowed letters from the g ...
'', in which players compete to build a consecutive or square group of four pieces, the ''Scarney'' board games are played by removing pieces from the board.
Board games

The earliest board game from Scarne's company, John Scarne Games, is ''Scarnie'' (1931), which he mentions in his 1966 autobiography, accompanied by a photograph of himself playing a prototype of the game with
James J. Braddock in 1929 at the boxer's training camp.
The game is played by two to four players on a board with 28 positions, divided equally into four "stations" of seven, and uses 28 pieces numbered from 1 to 28; twenty of the pieces are one color, while eight are another color. The players shuffle the pieces face-down, then each draws a piece and shows it to the other(s) face-up, with the player who drew the lowest-numbered piece going first. The pieces are then re-shuffled and placed in the four "stations" on the board, face-up.
[
In a single turn, each player removes one, two, or three pieces from one station by pushing them out of that station into the middle of the board, subject to the following rules:][
# All pieces removed in a single turn must be the same color.
# All pieces removed in a single turn must be from the same station.
# Each player is free to choose any of the four stations for removal during each of their turns, i.e., a player is not obligated to remove pieces from the same station in successive turns.
# The numbers on the board (1 through 7) are strictly for convenience in asking the other player(s) to help remove pieces without having to reach across the board.
Turns are passed to the left. The objective is to force one player to remove the last piece, which is similar to '' Nim'', but using four piles and 28 pieces; ''Scarnie'' adds a scoring system where the winning player(s) are awarded points equal to the number on the last piece removed.]
, , Scarney
Scarne refined the game and released it as ''Scar-Nee'' (1956), which uses a 16-space game board arranged in a square grid and adds jumping mechanics similar to ''Checkers
Checkers (American English), also known as draughts (; English in the Commonwealth of Nations, Commonwealth English), is a group of Abstract strategy game, strategy board games for two players which involve forward movements of uniform game ...
'' for removing pieces. Rules were included for a one-player version, ''I.Q. Solitaire''.[ The game was re-released as ''Scarney'' in 1962, and later reissued in 1968 and the 1970s.
''Scarney'' is played with sixteen distinct pieces, four each in four different colors (red, black, yellow, and green), with one side marked with one to four pips. The game board has sixteen spaces arranged in a 4×4 square grid, and each space is connected to its neighbors vertically and horizontally by straight lines.] For game notation, spaces are numbered left-to-right and top-to-bottom sequentially, starting with C1 in the upper left corner, continuing with C5 in the leftmost space of the second row from the top, and ending with C16 in the lower right corner; pieces are identified an alphanumeric code using the first letter of the color and the pip value, e.g., B3 is the black three-pip piece.[
]
Scarney Solitaire
For the solitaire game, the player shuffles the 16 pieces face-down and places one on each square space of the board, then turns each one face-up.[ The initial move is to remove one piece with a 1- or 2-pip value, which opens up one space.][
Additional pieces are removed by jumping horizontally or vertically into an open space, but not diagonally.][ In addition, a piece may not jump over a like-colored piece, i.e., the piece that jumps must be a different color than the piece it jumps over. For example, a black 1-pip piece cannot jump a black 3-pip piece, even if the targeted space beyond the piece to be jumped is open.][ The game ends when there are no more legal jumps to be made.][
Scoring is based on the pips on the pieces captured, added to various bonuses for a single remaining piece, the color of the remaining piece(s), and the placement of the remaining piece(s).][
]
Multiplayer Scarney
The same solitaire play mechanic of jumping pieces to remove them from the board is used in the multiplayer variants, including ''Scarney Singles'' (two to four players, each taking a turn to remove a piece),[ ''Scarney Doubles'' (limited to two players),][ and ''High-Low Scarney'' (a series of games that ends after one player scores more than 100 points).][
]
Card and dice games
Although Scarne stated in his 1966 autobiography he "refused to invent or market a parlor board game that makes use of dice, cards or spindles" because he disliked all forms of gambling,[ he later published both ''Skarney Kards'' (a card game, 1967) and ''Scarney Dice'' (a dice game, 1969).
]
,
''Skarney Kards'' (1967), also published as ''Skarney'' (1969), comes with two French-suited card decks and four jokers. The primary games use both decks and all four jokers shuffled together as either ''Skarney Partnership'' or ''Skarney Singles'', and both are considered variants of ''rummy
Rummy is a group of games related by the feature of matching playing cards, cards of the same rank or sequence and same suit. The basic goal in any form of rummy is to build ''Meld (cards), melds'' which can be either Set (cards), sets (three ...
''. Scarne also published rules for ''Skarney Gin'', a two-player variant of gin rummy
Gin Rummy, or simply Gin, is a two-player card game variant of Rummy. It has enjoyed widespread popularity as both a social and a gambling game, especially during the mid twentieth century, and remains today one of the most widely played two-pla ...
, using a single deck.[
]
''Scarney Dice'' (1969) uses five modified six-sided dice, in which the 2- and 5-pip sides of each die are replaced with the word "DEAD", so the game may be played with standard dice by considering the 2- and 5-pip faces "dead". To start, each player uses a cup to roll the five dice, and the player with the highest sum total, counting "dead" faces as 0, becomes the first "shooter"; the player with the second-highest sum is re-seated to the shooter's left, and seating continues in this manner.[
Each player contributes a predetermined ]ante
Ante or Antes may refer to:
* Ante (cards), an initial stake paid in a card game
* Ante (poker), a forced bet in the game of poker
* Ante (name), Croatian form of the given name Anthony
* The Latin word ''ante'', meaning "before", which is used as ...
to a common pot to start the first round, which Scarne calls a frame. Seven frames are played in a complete game.[
The shooter then rolls the five dice in a cup. If one, two, or three dice are rolled "dead", these are set aside and the remaining "live" dice are re-rolled. If four dice are rolled "dead", that is a "Little Scarney" and the four dice are also set aside; the remaining "live" die is re-rolled. If five dice are rolled "dead", that is a "Big Scarney" and the shooter wins the match and pot. The process of re-rolling and setting aside "dead" dice continues until the shooter rolls an all-"live" result with the remaining dice.][
Once an all-live throw is achieved, the shooter may choose to pass the dice to the player on their left, or "hit" by making an additional roll, in which the goal is to achieve another all-live throw. When the shooter passes, their score is the sum of that all-live throw, plus any applicable bonuses for results achieved on a single throw. If the shooter instead "hits" and makes another all-live throw, their score is the total of the two all-live throws, again adding any applicable bonuses. However, if the shooter misses by throwing one or more dead dice on the additional throw, they lose the points scored by the original all-live total, and are forced to re-roll after setting aside the dead dice until they achieve another all-live throw.][
The shooter may choose to "double down" by announcing their intention and contributing an extra ante to the pot. This choice must be made prior to achieving any score, meaning the announcement must be made before the first throw, or before the first all-live throw. The double score applies only to the point value, not the bonus score.][
When the shooter has one live die left, they may call "opposite" prior to revealing the throw, which means they accept the score on the opposite side of the die. For example, if they call "opposite" and roll a six, their score is one, which is the opposite face from six.][ In addition, when the shooter has one live die left and they choose to double, the double applies only when they throw a one or a six.][
Once the shooter's score has been determined, the dice are passed to the player on their left, and the next player rolls the dice in a similar fashion to determine their score. If any player rolls a "Big Scarney", that is an instant win, and they take the entire pot; otherwise, the highest score wins the pot after all players have had a turn rolling the dice, completing the frame. The player on the left of the player who won that frame rolls first for the next frame.][
]
''Scarney 3000'' is a variant that was included with the original ''Scarney Dice'' release; when the game was re-released, the name was changed to ''Scarney 3000'' (1972), making this variant the default. For the 1972 game, the 2- and 5-pip faces were marked as "Scarney" instead of "DEAD". In ''Scarney 3000'', the objective changes to be the first player to achieve a cumulative score of 3000. Any hand that contains one or two "dead" dice is scored as the sum of the face values plus fifty points for each "dead" die. In addition, bonuses apply when there are three, four, or five of a kind, with five of a kind with any face (including "dead" / "Scarney") scoring 3000 points, making that combination an instant win.[
Throws with numbered pips in three or four of a kind are required to have at least one "dead" die to confirm the bonus applies. If the throw would qualify for a bonus with numbered pips but does not include a "dead" die, the three or four qualifying bonus dice are set aside and the remaining dice are re-rolled; if the re-roll includes a "dead" die, the bonus is "confirmed".][ It is also possible the re-roll could qualify for a larger bonus; for example, if the initial roll is three aces, a five, and a six, the initial bonus is for three of a kind (aces). Suppose the confirmation roll with the two remaining dice results in an ace and a two, which means the player is now eligible for a bonus for four of a kind (aces), but still does not have a "dead" die to confirm the throw. The remaining die would be re-rolled again, which could result in either a "dead" face, confirming the four of a kind; another ace, qualifying for the five of a kind bonus; or another pip value (three, four, or six), failing to "confirm" the result, in which case the hand is said to have "busted" and scores no points.][
]
Other games by Scarne
* ''Follow the Arrow'' (1947, 1964), a two-player game similar to ''Chinese checkers
Chinese checkers (US) or Chinese chequers (UK), known as ''Sternhalma'' in German, is a Abstract strategy game, strategy board game of German origin that can be played by two, three, four, or six people, playing individually or with partners. The ...
''. It uses a board with a rectangular grid of spaces connected horizontally and vertically, laid out in five columns by six rows, and arrows governing movement between some of the spaces.
* ''Teeko
Teeko is an abstract strategy game invented by John Scarne in 1937 and rereleased in refined form in 1952 and again in the 1960s. Teeko was marketed by Scarne's company, John Scarne Games Inc.; its quirky name, he said, borrowed letters from the g ...
'' (1937, 1952, 1964), another two-player game where the objective is to form a straight line or square with four like-colored pieces.
Notes
References
External links
* (1931)
* (1956)
* (1962)
* (1967)
* (1969)
* {{BGG , id=16840 , name=Scarney 3000 (1972)
Abstract strategy games