


After each deal a score is awarded, depending on the type of deal, how high it was won (or lost) and bidding calls that had been made. Among the Neue Nationalgaleries most famous and iconic works are Potsdamer Platz by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, The Skat Players by Otto Dix, and Whos. Points from tricks are not directly added to the players' overall score, they are only used to determine the outcome of the deal (win or loss for declarer), although winning by certain margins may increase the score for that deal. The game is based on Schafkopf, Ombre (bidding) and Tarock (remaining cards). Otherwise, the defending team wins the deal. Traditional German card game for three players played with a standard card deck (2-6 removed), roughly 200 years old. The total face value of all cards being 120 points, declarer's goal is to take at least 61 points in tricks in order to win the deal. Then, ten tricks are played, allowing players to take trick points: each card has a face value (except in Null games) and is worth that amount in points for the player winning the trick. Each deal starts with a bidding phase to determine declarer and type of game. A central aspect of the game are the three coexisting varieties called “suit game”, “Grand” and “Null”, that differ in suit order, scoring and even overall goal to achieve. The game can also be played in a round of four players in this case, the dealer will sit out the hand that was dealt. It is held at the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin.He also had the later title of Kartenspielende Kriegskrüppel (War veterans playing cards). It depicts invalids of the First World War playing a card game. The two defenders are not allowed to communicate in any way except by their choice of cards to play. The Skat Players (German: Die Skatspieler) is an oil and collage on canvas painting executed by Otto Dix in 1920. At the beginning of each deal, one player becomes declarer and the other two players become the defending team. Skat is a game for exactly three players. But the main innovation of this new game was then that of the Bidding process. In the earliest known form of the game, the player in prior position was dealt twelve cards to the other players' ten each, made two discards, constituting the skat, and then announced a contract. It has become the most loved and widely played German card game, especially in German-speaking regions. This will pay for the making of the deck of cards used by the Scat Players when they are playing poker. Skat was developed by the members of the Brommesche Tarok-Gesellschaft between 18 in Altenburg, in what is now the Federated State of Thuringia, Germany, based on the three-player game of Tarock, also known as Tarot, and the four-player game of Schafkopf (the American equivalent being Sheepshead).
