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General rules for Hanabi:
== Overview ==
<br />The '''CHOP''' card is the un-clued card which is furthest to the '''RIGHT'''.
<br />The '''DRAW''' card is the un-clued card which is furthest to the '''LEFT''', almost always this is the left card.


1) New cards come from the left so '''DISCARD''' cards from '''RIGHT'''
* Hanabi is a cooperative game. Your goal, as a team, is to build a fabulous fireworks show.
* You have to put together fireworks by playing each individual colour ''(red, yellow, green, blue and white)'' in series (1 ⇨ 2 ⇨ 3 ⇨ 4 ⇨ 5).
* Each colour in the deck has {{card|1}}{{card|1}}{{card|1}}, {{card|2}}{{card|2}}, {{card|3}}{{card|3}}, {{card|4}}{{card|4}}, {{card|5}}.
* You cannot see your own cards; you can only see the cards of your teammates.
* You can only communicate with your teammates via '''clues''', '''playing''' and '''discarding''' cards (see below).
* No other communication is allowed.


2) Save - Sometimes players can have important cards that not playable immediately. '''TO SAVE''' a card, '''WAIT UNTIL''' the card is the '''CHOP''' card and clue it '''BY NUMBER'''.
{|class="wikitable" style="width:auto;" border="2"
|+Final Score Ratings
!Points
!Overall impression
|-
|0-5
|horrible, booed by the crowd...
|-
|6-10
|mediocre, just a spattering of applause.
|-
|11-15
|honourable, but will not be remembered for very long...
|-
|16-20
|excellent, crowd pleasing.
|-
|21-24
|amazing, will be remembered for a very long time!
|-
|25-29
|legendary, everyone left speechless, stars in their eyes!
|-
|30
|Divine, the display outshines the stars!
|}Note: '''25''' is the maximum score with '''Normal: 5 colors'''.


3) To make somebody to put(place/play) card there are 2 ways:
== Setup ==
  3.1 '''BY COLOUR''': when you get or give color clue it means '''LEFT COLORED CARD PLAYABLE''' (unless the clue provides more information on another card)
  3.2 '''BY NUMBER''': when you get or give a number clue it means '''LEFT COLORED CARD PLAYABLE''' (unless it provides more information on another card AND it is not a '''SAVE''' clue)
  3.3 could be another variants(if you got 222 remember that all of them could be played after all 111111)


4) Try not clue cards which can never be played because they won't discard those cards until you use another clue on them or they can use the process of elimination to determine that they aren't playable.
<div style="display:flex;gap:2rem;align-items:center;">
{|class="wikitable" style="width:auto;" border="2"
|+Deal
!# Players
!2-3
!4-5
|-
!# Cards
|5
|4
|}
{{Hclue|8}} clue tokens
</div>


5) Try not to give unnecessary clues. In advanced play, every clue is played with a purpose behind it.
== Game play ==


<br />Advanced Tactics:
Players take turns to either:


5) Intentional Discard - Sometimes players can have hands where all cards are important and unplayable. To tell a player that his hand blocked, discard your '''CHOP''' card when you have the '''LAST CLUE''' ('''always try to give him clue to give and play his hand as fast as it possible''')
* Give a '''clue'''
* '''Play''' a card, or
* '''Discard''' a card


6) Finesse
=== Clue ===


Example 1
Possible with at least {{Hclue|1|size=1.5}} available:
Table:
* '''All''' cards of a colour, or
R Y G B W M
* '''All''' cards of a number, or
0 0 0 0 0 0
* '''No''' cards of a colour, ''e.g. "'''Player1''' to '''Player2''': you have no red card"'' or
* '''No''' cards of a number ''e.g. "'''Player1''' to '''Player2''': you have no 5"''


XX|XX|XX - me
# The active player selects a card in another player's hand.
# The active player selects a clue option.
# {{Hclue|1|size=1.5}} is moved from 'available' to 'used'.


??|??|?? - you
=== Play ===


5g|2b|4r - 3rd player
# The active player selects a card in their hand.
# The active player selects the 'Play selected card' button.
#* If the played card fits in any of the sequences, it is placed in the appropriate colour stack on the table.
#* If the played card does not fit, it is placed in the discard pile and the team gets a ''misfire'' token.
# A replacement card is drawn.


I clue the 3rd player BLUE color. The card I clued which would normally be played is '''UNPLAYABLE''' and one card would need to be played first. This signals you that you have that card at '''LEFT POSITION''' so you can assume that your '''DRAW''' card is the playable 1b.
=== Discard ===


If your hand contain clued card that could be that needed by color or by number, you should play it, not the left. See example 2.
Possible with fewer than {{Hclue|8|size=1.5}} available:
# The active player selects a card in their hand.
# The active player selects the 'Discard selected card' button.
# The discarded card is placed in the discard pile.
# {{Hclue|1|size=1.5}} is moved from 'used' to 'available'.
# A replacement card is drawn.


<br />Example 2
== Game end ==
Table:
R Y G B W M
0 2 0 1 0 0


XX|XX|XX - me
The game can end in several ways:
* All cards have been drawn from the deck. After this happens, each player has one more turn. The game ends with the score after the last turn.
* Your team played all possible cards. In this case, the game ends immediately.
* Your team made three mistakes that caused misfires. In this case, all players lose the game and receive -10 ELO points.
* Your team concedes the game. All players receive -10 ELO points.
* A player quits the game. Only the player that quit first receives -10 ELO points. All other players' ELO is unchanged.


??|??|2? - you
== Conventions ==


5g|3b|4r - 3rd player
* There are not enough {{Hclue|size=1}} to clue both colour and number of every played card, so the team must agree on a set of clue, play and discard interpretations, known as a convention.
* Many players use different conventions and if teammates have very different clue interpretations, the game becomes unsuccessful.
* Read about some of the most common conventions in '''[https://boardgamearena.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=26863 this forum post]''' by [https://boardgamearena.com/player?id=84207926 Romain672].
''Note: the BGA list of conventions does not cover all conventions, so please respect the convention the table creator wants to play. This is why there is an option to display the convention for the table.''


Suppose on your last turn you received a 2 clue indicating that you should play the 2y. You now have a clued 2 card still in your hand which you aren't sure you can play. I clue the 3rd player BLUE color. Again, the card I clued which would normally be played is '''UNPLAYABLE''' and one card would need to be played first. You should, in this case, play the 2 card which has already been clued because you have the information on it.
=== Standard convention ===


7) Bluff
Players assume:
Table:
* Every marked card will be playable at some point.
R Y G B W M
* The oldest, unmarked (chop) card is safe to discard.
0 0 0 0 0 0
* Cards known to be trash are discarded in priority ''e.g. cards marked blue when the blue stack is completed.''


XX|XX|XX - me
==== Play clue ====


1g|4b|3w - 2nd player
* A clue that does not mark a (unique) chop card¹.
* Focus is the newest card.
Priority:
# Lead to plays in other hands.
# Lower rank.


??|??|?r - you
==== Save clue ====


I clued you RED color. 2nd player will (and does) play his 1 green using the rule of finesse. 2nd player determined that your red is '''UNPLAYABLE''', and trying to fix it, he played the 1g which was not clued. You see that the color of the card played was different from the color of the card you were clued, which gives you the information that the clue you received was a '''BLUFF'''. Now you know that your red card is 2r (or possibly also 2m in very difficult difficulty).
* A (number) clue that marks a (unique) chop card¹.
* Focus is the chop card.


8) Reverse
¹''Exception: 2 player game with 2+ consecutive saves.''


Example 1
==== Fix clue ====
Table:
R Y G B W M
0 0 0 0 0 0


XX|XX|XX - me
* A follow-up clue on the same hand as an initial play clue.
* Required to change the focus (and prevent a misfire).


4g|2y|3w - 2nd player
{{infoBoxes |maxWidth=650 |state=collapsed
|title1=Fix clue example 1
|body1={{Hr|2}} {{Hy|5}} {{Hg|5}} {{Hb|5}} {{Hw|5}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|1}}{{Hw|1}}{{Hw|2}}{{Hr|4}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hy|4}}{{Hr|5}}{{Hr|3}}{{Hw|3}} |Cathy 🡲}}


??|??|?? - you
* Cathy's {{Hr|3}} must play next.
* The focus of a 3 clue on its own will be {{Hw|3}} and the focus of a red  clue will be {{Hr|5}}.
* Alice to Cathy: these 2 cards are red.


I clued 2nd player YELLOW color which would clue them to play under ordinary circumstances but instead of playing they discarded. This indicates to you that you have a '''PLAYABLE''' yellow '''DRAW''' card. In this case, you should play your un-clued draw card.
{{Hr|2}} {{Hy|5}} {{Hg|5}} {{Hb|5}} {{Hw|5}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|1}}{{Hw|1}}{{Hw|2}}{{Hr|4}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hy|4}}{{Hr|5|c=}}{{Hr|3|c=}}{{Hw|3}} |Cathy 🡲}}


Example 2
* Bob to Cathy: these 2 cards are 3s - this fix clue changes the focus from {{Hr|5}} to {{Hr|3}} (now visible).
Table:
R Y G B W M
0 0 0 0 0 0


XX|XX|XX - me
{{Hr|2}} {{Hy|5}} {{Hg|5}} {{Hb|5}} {{Hw|5}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|1}}{{Hw|1}}{{Hw|2}}{{Hr|4}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hy|4}}{{Hr|5|c=}}{{Hr|3|n=|c=}}{{Hw|3|n=}} |Cathy 🡲}}


??|?y|?? - you
|title2=Fix clue example 2
|body2={{Hr}} {{Hy|1}} {{Hg}} {{Hb}} {{Hw}} {{Hm}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|5}}{{Hy|4}}{{Hr|3}}{{Hg|5}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|4}}{{Hg|4}}{{Hm|2}}{{Hy|2}} |Cathy 🡲}}


1y|2b|3g - 3rd player
* Avalanche of colors option is on, so multicolour cards are marked by '''any colour clue'''.
* Cathy's {{Hy|2}} should play before it is discarded.
* The focus of a 2 clue on its own will be {{Hm|2}} and the focus of a yellow  clue will also be {{Hm|2}}.


Example 2 is the same hand from the other perspective.
* Alice to Cathy: these 2 cards are yellow.


Finesse, Reverse, and Bluff help you to save +50% clues, so getting a score of 30 (in the higher difficulties) becomes possible. There are some other variants of these advanced tricks; you situations like reverse for next 3 turns or finesse when 2-3 players have playable cards at the left sides and you just give clue to the last playable card...
{{Hr}} {{Hy|1}} {{Hg}} {{Hb}} {{Hw}} {{Hm}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|5}}{{Hy|4}}{{Hr|3}}{{Hg|5}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|4}}{{Hg|4}}{{Hm|2|{{y}}|1|1|c=}}{{Hy|2|c=}} |Cathy 🡲}}


9) Positional Discard (endgame) - Sometimes in the last turns you will have no useful cards to play and need to give a clue to indicate to a player which card to play but you have no remaining clues. In this case, discard the card in the same position as the card that you want that player to play.
* Bob to Cathy: these 2 cards are 2s - this fix clue changes the focus from the left 2 to the other 2.
Table:
R Y G B W M
5 5 3 5 5 5


XX|XX|XX - me
{{Hr}} {{Hy|1}} {{Hg}} {{Hb}} {{Hw}} {{Hm}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|5}}{{Hy|4}}{{Hr|3}}{{Hg|5}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|4}}{{Hg|4}}{{Hm|2|{{y}}|1|1|n=|c=}}{{Hy|2|n=|c=}} |Cathy 🡲}}


??|??|3? - you
* ''Note: if a multicolour card is the intended target of a play clue, the clearest clue would be a colour that does not splash any other card.''
}}


1y|2b|5g - 3rd player
==== Bad clue ====


In this example, I discard my 2nd card. This indicates to you that your 2nd card is the 4g.
* Tell a lie ''e.g. a clue that marks {{Hr|2}} as playable without the required {{Hr|1}}.''
* Mark unknown trash or duplicate cards ''e.g. mark '''4'''s in another hand when your hand could have a copy of that '''4'''.''


10) Having the optimal player draw the last card (endgame) - At the end of the game, the person who draws the last card (which happens either by playing or discarding) triggers the end of the game. After the last card is drawn, each player receives exactly one more turn. Sometimes near the end of the game you will want a specific player to play or discard in order to get the last turn. Giving an unusable clue can prevent a player from drawing the last card and begin the last round.
{{infoBoxes |maxWidth=650
|title1=Standard convention: Play clue
|body1={{Hr|1}} {{Hy|5}} {{Hg|1}} {{Hb|3}} {{Hw|4}}
{{cardholder|{{Hr|2}}{{Hy|4}}{{Hr|3}}{{Hw|5|n=}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|4}}{{Hy|1}}{{Hr|4}}{{Hr|3}} |Cathy 🡲}}


Table:
* Alice to Bob: these 2 cards are red.
'''1 card remaining in deck - Your turn'''
R Y G B W M
5 5 3 4 5 5


XX|XX|5b - me
{{Hr|1}} {{Hy|5}} {{Hg|1}} {{Hb|3}} {{Hw|4}}
{{cardholder|{{Hr|2|c=}}{{Hy|4}}{{Hr|3|c=}}{{Hw|5|n=}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|4}}{{Hy|1}}{{Hr|4}}{{Hr|3}} |Cathy 🡲}}


??|??|3? - you
* Bob now knows his newest card is the next playable in the sequence ({{Hr|2}}), and the other marked card is {{Hr|3}}, {{Hr|4}} or {{Hr|5}} (because every marked card will be playable at some point).


1y|4b|5g - 3rd player
|title2=Standard convention: Prompt
|body2={{Hr|2}} {{Hy|5}} {{Hg|1}} {{Hb|3}} {{Hw|4}}
{{cardholder|{{Hb|5}}{{Hy|4}}{{Hr|3|c=}}{{Hw|5|n=}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|2}}{{Hw|4}}{{Hy|1}}{{Hr|4}} |Cathy 🡲}}


In this situation, assume everyone knows where the remaining playable cards are. Instead of discarding in this situation, you want the 3rd player be the one to play and draw the last card. Give any clue to prevent triggering the endgame so that 3rd player can play 4b triggering the endgame and then in their last turn play the 5g.
* Alice to Cathy: this card is red.


== Cards ==
{{Hr|2}} {{Hy|5}} {{Hg|1}} {{Hb|3}} {{Hw|4}}
{{cardholder|{{Hb|5}}{{Hy|4}}{{Hr|3|c=}}{{Hw|5|n=}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|2}}{{Hw|4}}{{Hy|1}}{{Hr|4|c=}} |Cathy 🡲}}


In a standard game of Hanabi, there are 5 colors of cards of value 1 to 5. In each suit there are
* Cathy now knows her marked card is the next playable in the sequence ⇨ {{Hr|4}}, because {{Hr|3}} is already marked.
* Bob now knows his marked red card is {{Hr|3}} and he must play it now.
}}


-three 1s
=== Finesse convention ===


-two 2s
Players assume:
* Standard convention
* Play clues may also include the '''newest, unmarked''' cards in every hand.


-two 3s
{{infoBoxes3 |maxWidth=650
|title1=Finesse example
|body1={{Hr}} {{Hy}} {{Hg}} {{Hb}} {{Hw}}
{{cardholder|{{Hb|1}}{{Hr|5}}{{Hb|3}}{{Hw|1}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hr|5}}{{Hr|2}}{{Hb|2}}{{Hg|2}} |Cathy 🡲}}


-two 4s
* Alice to Cathy: this card is blue.


-one 5
{{Hr}} {{Hy}} {{Hg}} {{Hb}} {{Hw}}
{{cardholder|{{Hb|1}}{{Hr|5}}{{Hb|3}}{{Hw|1}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hr|5}}{{Hr|2}}{{Hb|2|c=}}{{Hg|2}} |Cathy 🡲}}


== About "cheating" ==
* Cathy now knows her marked card {{Hb|2}} is playable.
* Bob knows that Cathy will bomb her {{Hb|2}} as {{Hb|1}} unless a {{Hb|1}} is played first.
* Bob does not see the connecting {{Hb|1}}, so assumes he has to play it now.
* Bob does not have a marked card that could be {{Hb|1}}, so Bob '''blind plays his newest unmarked card'''.
* {{Hb|1}} successfully plays.


In the "real life Hanabi", you can talk. That's why we chose to let the chat open for the online version.
|title2=Reversed finesse example
|body2={{Hr}} {{Hy}} {{Hg}} {{Hb}} {{Hw}}
{{cardholder|{{Hr|5}}{{Hr|2}}{{Hb|2}}{{Hg|2}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hb|1}}{{Hr|5}}{{Hb|3}}{{Hw|1}} |Cathy 🡲}}


As a consequence, it is very easy to cheat at Hanabi. However, as you can imagine, cheating is very stupid and has no interest... except for ELO boosting. This is why there is no international ranking for this game (ie: best player, second best player) and no trophies associated to it.
* Alice to Bob: this card is blue.


== ELO rating ==
{{Hr}} {{Hy}} {{Hg}} {{Hb}} {{Hw}}
If you are playing with ELO rating on, your ELO may be changed at the end of the game.
{{cardholder|{{Hr|5}}{{Hr|2}}{{Hb|2|c=}}{{Hg|2}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hb|1}}{{Hr|5}}{{Hb|3}}{{Hw|1}} |Cathy 🡲}}
 
* Bob now knows his marked {{Hb|2}} is playable.
* Bob sees the newest, unmarked card in Cathy's hand is of the same colour '''and''' playable now. Bob assumes it is a finesse with the players in reversed order and his blue card is {{Hb|2}}.
 
|title3=Bluff example
|body3=
{{Hr}} {{Hy}} {{Hg}} {{Hb}} {{Hw}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|1}}{{Hr|5}}{{Hb|3}}{{Hw|1}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hr|5}}{{Hr|2}}{{Hb|2}}{{Hg|2}} |Cathy 🡲}}
 
* Alice to Cathy: this card is blue.
 
{{Hr}} {{Hy}} {{Hg}} {{Hb}} {{Hw}}
{{cardholder|{{Hw|1}}{{Hr|5}}{{Hb|3}}{{Hw|1}} |Bob 🡲}}
{{cardholder|{{Hr|5}}{{Hr|2}}{{Hb|2|c=}}{{Hg|2}} |Cathy 🡲}}
 
* Cathy now knows her marked card {{Hb|2}} is playable.
* Bob does not see the connecting {{Hb|1}}, so assumes he has to play it now.
* Bob does not have a marked card that could be {{Hb|1}}, so Bob '''blind plays his newest unmarked card'''.
* {{Hw|1}} successfully plays and the bluff is revealed.
* Before Bob played, Cathy thought her marked card was {{Hb|1}}.
* After Bob plays, Cathy knows her marked card is another valuable blue card.
All conventions interpret Cathy's card as a valuable, not-yet-playable blue card.
 
Some interpretations are more stringent, also must be a ''1-away-from-playable'' {{Hb|2}}.
}}
 
=== Marked card discard ===
 
If a non-trash marked card is discarded it means:
* A copy of that card is already marked in someone else's hand (''sarcastic discard''); or
* A copy of that card must be marked in a future save clue (use with caution); or
* An unmarked copy of that card is playable (''gentleman's discard'')
 
=== Definitions ===
 
<div style="columns:20rem auto;column-gap:2rem;">
==== <span style="color:{{r}};font:700 larger cursive;">Basic</span> ====
 
'''Convention''': Agreed set of clue, play and discard interpretations. ''e.g. a number clue that marks the chop card should be interpreted as a unique card save (if there is a unique card of that number).''
 
'''Strategy''': Plan to achieve the highest score. ''e.g. to mark first copies of cards.''
 
'''Marked''': A card touched by a clue.
 
'''Focus''': The target card of a clue.
 
'''Play clue''': Clue that marks a focused card to play.
 
'''Playable''': A card that can be marked by a play clue.
 
'''Trash''': A card that can never be played successfully.
 
'''Bomb''': A play that causes a misfire.
 
'''Draw''': The newest card in a hand.
 
'''Chop''': The oldest, unmarked card in a hand.
 
'''Unique''': The last remaining card of its rank and colour (that can be played successfully at some point).
 
'''Save''': A (number) clue that marks a chop card to prevent discard.
 
'''Prompt''': A play clue that causes connecting marked card(s) to play.
 
==== ''<span style="color:{{g}};font:700 larger cursive;">Intermediate</span>'' ====
 
'''Good Touch Principle''': All marked cards will eventually be played.
 
'''Splash''': Additional new colour or rank information of cards that are not the focus.
 
'''Locked''': A hand with all cards marked without any plays.
 
'''Reclue''': A repeated clue that causes marked card(s) to play.
 
'''Fix clue''': Follow-up clue required to change the focus of a play clue (and prevent a misfire).
 
'''Discard clue''': Clue that marks trash card(s) to be discarded (to prevent a misfire or unwanted discard).
 
'''Stall clue''': A clue given to avoid discarding.
 
'''Finesse''': A play clue that causes connecting unmarked card(s) to play.
 
'''Bluff''': A play clue that causes a non-connecting unmarked card to play immediately.
 
'''Bluff seat''': The player directly before the player who is bluffed.
 
'''Bottom-decked''': When the remaining copy of a playable card is too near the bottom of the deck to achieve a perfect score.
 
'''Early save''': A save clue with a known playable card in the same hand, or does not mark the chop card¹. ''i.e. a play clue.''
 
'''Double save''': Two consecutive saves in the same hand.
 
'''Double discard''': Two consecutive players discard copies of the same chop card, resulting in a unique discard. ''A special problem, since, to each of the consecutive players, a number clue that marks their chop card does not look like a save clue (and therefore looks like a play clue).''
 
'''Sarcastic discard''': Discard of a duplicate marked copy of a card in another hand.
 
'''Skip''' / '''steal''': When a player gives a clue that could have been given by one of the skipped players.
 
'''Scream discard''': An unexpected discard to save a unique card in another hand.
 
==== ''<span style="color:{{m}};font:700 larger cursive;">Advanced</span>'' ====
 
'''Long finesse''': A finesse of three or more cards lasting more than one complete round.
 
'''Layered finesse''': A finesse with unrelated playable card(s) in front of the target card(s).
 
'''Scream play''': An unexpected chop play to save a unique card in another hand.
 
'''Clued misplay''': A play clue that causes a misfire to prevent a unique discard in the same hand.
 
'''Positional misplay''': An unexpected play that marks the same slot position in another hand to play immediately.
 
'''Gentleman's discard''': Discard of a playable card to play an unmarked copy in another hand.
 
'''Play refusal''': Instead of playing, a player clues or discards their '''chop'''.
 
'''Hesitation play''': After a play refusal of a playable card, another player may be able to blind play an unmarked card.
 
'''Generation discard''': An unexpected discard to gain {{Hclue|1}}.
 
</div>
 
== Options ==
 
=== Colors ===
 
==== Normal: 5 colors ====
 
{|class="wikitable" style="width:auto;" border="2"
|+50 cards
!Red (r)
|{{Hr|1}}{{Hr|1}}{{Hr|1}}
|{{Hr|2}}{{Hr|2}}
|{{Hr|3}}{{Hr|3}}
|{{Hr|4}}{{Hr|4}}
|{{Hr|5}}
|-
!Yellow (y)
|{{Hy|1}}{{Hy|1}}{{Hy|1}}
|{{Hy|2}}{{Hy|2}}
|{{Hy|3}}{{Hy|3}}
|{{Hy|4}}{{Hy|4}}
|{{Hy|5}}
|-
!Green (g)
|{{Hg|1}}{{Hg|1}}{{Hg|1}}
|{{Hg|2}}{{Hg|2}}
|{{Hg|3}}{{Hg|3}}
|{{Hg|4}}{{Hg|4}}
|{{Hg|5}}
|-
!Blue (b)
|{{Hb|1}}{{Hb|1}}{{Hb|1}}
|{{Hb|2}}{{Hb|2}}
|{{Hb|3}}{{Hb|3}}
|{{Hb|4}}{{Hb|4}}
|{{Hb|5}}
|-
!White (w)
|{{Hw|1}}{{Hw|1}}{{Hw|1}}
|{{Hw|2}}{{Hw|2}}
|{{Hw|3}}{{Hw|3}}
|{{Hw|4}}{{Hw|4}}
|{{Hw|5}}
|}
 
==== Tricky: 6th color (10 cards) ====
 
* These cards are marked by a separate ''multicolour'' clue.
{|class="wikitable" style="width:auto;" border="2"
|++10 cards
!Multicolour (m)
|{{Hm|1}}{{Hm|1}}{{Hm|1}}
|{{Hm|2}}{{Hm|2}}
|{{Hm|3}}{{Hm|3}}
|{{Hm|4}}{{Hm|4}}
|{{Hm|5}}
|}
 
==== Difficult: 6th color (5 cards) ====
 
* These cards are marked by a separate ''multicolour'' clue.
{|class="wikitable" style="width:auto;" border="2"
|++5 cards
!Multicolour (m)
|{{Hm|1}}
|{{Hm|2}}
|{{Hm|3}}
|{{Hm|4}}
|{{Hm|5}}
|}
 
==== Avalanche of Colors: Multicolor (10 multicolor) ====
 
* These cards are marked by '''any colour clue'''.
{|class="wikitable" style="width:auto;" border="2"
|++10 cards
!Multicolour (m)
|{{Hm|1}}{{Hm|1}}{{Hm|1}}
|{{Hm|2}}{{Hm|2}}
|{{Hm|3}}{{Hm|3}}
|{{Hm|4}}{{Hm|4}}
|{{Hm|5}}
|}
 
=== Black Powder ===
 
* Clues cannot be given for the colour black.
* Black cards must be played in '''reverse order''' 5 ⇨ 4 ⇨ 3 ⇨ 2 ⇨ 1.
{|class="wikitable" style="width:auto;" border="2"
|++10 cards
!Black Powder (p/k)
|{{Hk|5}}{{Hk|5}}{{Hk|5}}
|{{Hk|4}}{{Hk|4}}
|{{Hk|3}}{{Hk|3}}
|{{Hk|2}}{{Hk|2}}
|{{Hk|1}}
|}
 
=== 5 flamboyants ===
 
After playing the last card of a colour, randomly draw a bonus card and apply its effect:
# Gain {{Hclue|1|size=1.2}}
# Gain {{Hclue|1|size=1.2}} and recover a life.
# Give a colour clue.
# Give a number clue.
# Shuffle a discarded card into the deck ''(optional)''.
# Play a discarded card ''(optional)''.
 
=== Convention used ===
 
{|class="wikitable" style="width:auto;" border="2"
!Name
!Summary
!References
|-
|'''Standard'''
|BGA convention without blind-plays.
|Standard convention above
 
[https://docs.google.com/document/d/1VzgN6WoeYwh5NYtHECzUNZqFvpVcg-EdObU-YNMlyhc Hanabi "reference" for bga]
|-
|'''Finesse'''
|BGA convention with blind-plays.
|Finesse convention above
 
[https://docs.google.com/document/d/1VzgN6WoeYwh5NYtHECzUNZqFvpVcg-EdObU-YNMlyhc Hanabi "reference" for bga]
|-
|'''Hat-guessing'''
|Clues relate to slot position, not the cards marked.
|[https://github.com/hanabi/hanabi.github.io/blob/main/misc/hat-guessing.md H-Group]
 
[https://github.com/fpvandoorn/hanabi/blob/master/doc_hat_player.md Robert Kaspar]
 
[https://github.com/hanabi/hanabi.github.io/blob/main/misc/empty-clues.md H-Group empty clues]
|-
|'''Logical Leftism'''
|No convention, just logic.
|[http://hanabilogic.eklablog.com/basics-level-1-a117610126 hanabi logic]
|-
|'''Closest Friend'''
|Clue interpretation depends on which player gave the clue.
|[https://github.com/hanabi/hanabi.github.io/blob/main/pdf/newest-friend.pdf H-Group]
|-
|'''Secret convention'''
|Each player randomly selects a secret '''[https://perchance.org/e6dtm5lj3r restriction]'''.
|[https://boardgamearena.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=26863 Secret variant]
 
[https://boardgamearena.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=71264#p71264 Secret hanabi restriction]
|-
|'''Conventional Leftism'''
|Same as Standard.
|[http://hanabilogic.eklablog.com/no-conventional-leftism-a117757604 hanabi logic]
[https://docs.google.com/document/d/1sz3if8-9JJDAcbvdi3MHEAv9L5ljyHHnTSEACKk5RUY/edit#heading=h.q88fl7o62h8c Postmans]
|-
|'''Chop-focus'''
|The focus of a clue that marks a chop card is always the chop card.
|[https://hanabi.github.io/docs/beginner/single-card-focus#determining-the-focus-4-steps H-Group]
|}
 
=== Preset deck ===


Here is how it works:
Preset decks are useful for comparing teams/conventions using the same deck:
* No (cards are shuffled)
* Preset deck #1 of the day
* Preset deck #2 of the day
* Preset deck #3 of the day
* Preset deck #4 of the day
* Preset deck #5 of the day
Preset decks are changed at [https://boardgamearena.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=48600#p48600 0:00 (?)] UTC


1) Every player on the team is temporarily considered as having the average ELO rating of the team.
=== Unofficial variant ===


2) The system will generate a bot associated with the score your team has achieved (let’s call it '''Hanabot'''). Hanabot’s ELO rating depends on the variant you are playing (50 cards, 60 cards, 60 cards multicolor), the number of players on the team and, most importantly, your team's score. All Hanabot’s ELO ratings have been set by an experienced player, they are not random or simply proportional to the score/number of players.
{|class="wikitable" style="width:auto;" border="2"
|+Deal
!# Players
!2
!3
!4
!5
|-
!# Cards
|'''6'''
|5
|4
|'''3'''
|}


3) Your team (actually your team's average ELO) will now compete against Hanabot. The system will calculate your team’s ELO gain/loss as though your team had tied with Hanabot.
== ELO rating ==
If your score is below 18 (50-card game) or below 21 (60-card game), Hanabot's ELO is always 1000.


FYI, you can find all bots' ELO ratings here: http://forum.boardgamearena.com/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=4814
'''[https://forum.boardgamearena.com/viewtopic.php?t=33785 Rating is visibly hidden around tables]''' with the 7 distinct ELO skill levels:
: {{Beginner}} {{Apprentice}} {{Average}} {{Good}} {{Strong}} {{Expert}} {{Master}}.


# '''''Hanabot''''''s ELO is generated from:
#* Final score¹
#* Average team ELO
#* Colour option²
# ELO change is calculated as if tied with Hanabot.


'''''[https://forum.boardgamearena.com/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=4814 Hanabots' ELO ratings]''' were set by an experienced player - i.e. ratings are not random or simply proportional to score or players' ELO.''


The 55-card variant (50 cards + 1 of each value in the sixth color) cannot be played with ELO rating on. This is because this variant is highly dependent on draw and a team’s score may not always reflect the players’ skills.
¹''Hanabot's ELO = 0 with scores < 18 (5 colours) and < 21 (6 colours).''


²''+5 card multicolor option is unrated (too dependent on draw to reflect skill).''


A loss (3 Strike tokens) is the same as a score of 0.
== Cheating ==


* Players can cheat at Hanabi by sharing information via the chat user interface. This is why ranking has been disabled for this game.


If you achieve the perfect score and this should cost you ELO points, you will be considered as having beaten the bot associated with the score, so that you lose no ELO points.
[[Category:Card games]]

Latest revision as of 00:01, 27 September 2024

Overview

  • Hanabi is a cooperative game. Your goal, as a team, is to build a fabulous fireworks show.
  • You have to put together fireworks by playing each individual colour (red, yellow, green, blue and white) in series (1 ⇨ 2 ⇨ 3 ⇨ 4 ⇨ 5).
  • Each colour in the deck has 111, 22, 33, 44, 5.
  • You cannot see your own cards; you can only see the cards of your teammates.
  • You can only communicate with your teammates via clues, playing and discarding cards (see below).
  • No other communication is allowed.
Final Score Ratings
Points Overall impression
0-5 horrible, booed by the crowd...
6-10 mediocre, just a spattering of applause.
11-15 honourable, but will not be remembered for very long...
16-20 excellent, crowd pleasing.
21-24 amazing, will be remembered for a very long time!
25-29 legendary, everyone left speechless, stars in their eyes!
30 Divine, the display outshines the stars!

Note: 25 is the maximum score with Normal: 5 colors.

Setup

Deal
# Players 2-3 4-5
# Cards 5 4

8clue tokens clue tokens

Game play

Players take turns to either:

  • Give a clue
  • Play a card, or
  • Discard a card

Clue

Possible with at least 1clue tokens available:

  • All cards of a colour, or
  • All cards of a number, or
  • No cards of a colour, e.g. "Player1 to Player2: you have no red card" or
  • No cards of a number e.g. "Player1 to Player2: you have no 5"
  1. The active player selects a card in another player's hand.
  2. The active player selects a clue option.
  3. 1clue tokens is moved from 'available' to 'used'.

Play

  1. The active player selects a card in their hand.
  2. The active player selects the 'Play selected card' button.
    • If the played card fits in any of the sequences, it is placed in the appropriate colour stack on the table.
    • If the played card does not fit, it is placed in the discard pile and the team gets a misfire token.
  3. A replacement card is drawn.

Discard

Possible with fewer than 8clue tokens available:

  1. The active player selects a card in their hand.
  2. The active player selects the 'Discard selected card' button.
  3. The discarded card is placed in the discard pile.
  4. 1clue tokens is moved from 'used' to 'available'.
  5. A replacement card is drawn.

Game end

The game can end in several ways:

  • All cards have been drawn from the deck. After this happens, each player has one more turn. The game ends with the score after the last turn.
  • Your team played all possible cards. In this case, the game ends immediately.
  • Your team made three mistakes that caused misfires. In this case, all players lose the game and receive -10 ELO points.
  • Your team concedes the game. All players receive -10 ELO points.
  • A player quits the game. Only the player that quit first receives -10 ELO points. All other players' ELO is unchanged.

Conventions

  • There are not enough clue tokens to clue both colour and number of every played card, so the team must agree on a set of clue, play and discard interpretations, known as a convention.
  • Many players use different conventions and if teammates have very different clue interpretations, the game becomes unsuccessful.
  • Read about some of the most common conventions in this forum post by Romain672.

Note: the BGA list of conventions does not cover all conventions, so please respect the convention the table creator wants to play. This is why there is an option to display the convention for the table.

Standard convention

Players assume:

  • Every marked card will be playable at some point.
  • The oldest, unmarked (chop) card is safe to discard.
  • Cards known to be trash are discarded in priority e.g. cards marked blue when the blue stack is completed.

Play clue

  • A clue that does not mark a (unique) chop card¹.
  • Focus is the newest card.

Priority:

  1. Lead to plays in other hands.
  2. Lower rank.

Save clue

  • A (number) clue that marks a (unique) chop card¹.
  • Focus is the chop card.

¹Exception: 2 player game with 2+ consecutive saves.

Fix clue

  • A follow-up clue on the same hand as an initial play clue.
  • Required to change the focus (and prevent a misfire).
Fix clue example 1
red2
,with a
red2clue,
yellow5
,with a
yellow5clue,
green5
,with a
green5clue,
blue5
,with a
blue5clue,
white5
,with a
white5clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
white2
,with a
white2clue,
red4
,with a
red4clue,
Bob 🡲
yellow4
,with a
yellow4clue,
red5
,with a
red5clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
white3
,with a
white3clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Cathy's
    red3
    ,with a
    red3clue,
    must play next.
  • The focus of a 3 clue on its own will be
    white3
    ,with a
    white3clue,
    and the focus of a red clue will be
    red5
    ,with a
    red5clue,
    .
  • Alice to Cathy: these 2 cards are red.
red2
,with a
red2clue,
yellow5
,with a
yellow5clue,
green5
,with a
green5clue,
blue5
,with a
blue5clue,
white5
,with a
white5clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
white2
,with a
white2clue,
red4
,with a
red4clue,
Bob 🡲
yellow4
,with a
yellow4clue,
red5
,with a
red5clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
white3
,with a
white3clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Bob to Cathy: these 2 cards are 3s - this fix clue changes the focus from
    red5
    ,with a
    red5clue,
    to
    red3
    ,with a
    red3clue,
    (now visible).
red2
,with a
red2clue,
yellow5
,with a
yellow5clue,
green5
,with a
green5clue,
blue5
,with a
blue5clue,
white5
,with a
white5clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
white2
,with a
white2clue,
red4
,with a
red4clue,
Bob 🡲
yellow4
,with a
yellow4clue,
red5
,with a
red5clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
white3
,with a
white3clue,
Cathy 🡲
Fix clue example 2
red
,with a
redclue,
yellow1
,with a
yellow1clue,
green
,with a
greenclue,
blue
,with a
blueclue,
white
,with a
whiteclue,
multicolour
,with a
multicolourclue,
white5
,with a
white5clue,
yellow4
,with a
yellow4clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
green5
,with a
green5clue,
Bob 🡲
white4
,with a
white4clue,
green4
,with a
green4clue,
multicolour2
,with a
multicolour2clue,
yellow2
,with a
yellow2clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Avalanche of colors option is on, so multicolour cards are marked by any colour clue.
  • Cathy's
    yellow2
    ,with a
    yellow2clue,
    should play before it is discarded.
  • The focus of a 2 clue on its own will be
    multicolour2
    ,with a
    multicolour2clue,
    and the focus of a yellow clue will also be
    multicolour2
    ,with a
    multicolour2clue,
    .
  • Alice to Cathy: these 2 cards are yellow.
red
,with a
redclue,
yellow1
,with a
yellow1clue,
green
,with a
greenclue,
blue
,with a
blueclue,
white
,with a
whiteclue,
multicolour
,with a
multicolourclue,
white5
,with a
white5clue,
yellow4
,with a
yellow4clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
green5
,with a
green5clue,
Bob 🡲
white4
,with a
white4clue,
green4
,with a
green4clue,
multicolour2
,with a
12clue,
yellow2
,with a
yellow2clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Bob to Cathy: these 2 cards are 2s - this fix clue changes the focus from the left 2 to the other 2.
red
,with a
redclue,
yellow1
,with a
yellow1clue,
green
,with a
greenclue,
blue
,with a
blueclue,
white
,with a
whiteclue,
multicolour
,with a
multicolourclue,
white5
,with a
white5clue,
yellow4
,with a
yellow4clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
green5
,with a
green5clue,
Bob 🡲
white4
,with a
white4clue,
green4
,with a
green4clue,
multicolour2
,with a
12clue,
yellow2
,with a
yellow2clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Note: if a multicolour card is the intended target of a play clue, the clearest clue would be a colour that does not splash any other card.

Bad clue

  • Tell a lie e.g. a clue that marks
    red2
    ,with a
    red2clue,
    as playable without the required
    red1
    ,with a
    red1clue,
    .
  • Mark unknown trash or duplicate cards e.g. mark 4s in another hand when your hand could have a copy of that 4.
Standard convention: Play clue
red1
,with a
red1clue,
yellow5
,with a
yellow5clue,
green1
,with a
green1clue,
blue3
,with a
blue3clue,
white4
,with a
white4clue,
red2
,with a
red2clue,
yellow4
,with a
yellow4clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
white5
,with a
white5clue,
Bob 🡲
white4
,with a
white4clue,
yellow1
,with a
yellow1clue,
red4
,with a
red4clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Alice to Bob: these 2 cards are red.
red1
,with a
red1clue,
yellow5
,with a
yellow5clue,
green1
,with a
green1clue,
blue3
,with a
blue3clue,
white4
,with a
white4clue,
red2
,with a
red2clue,
yellow4
,with a
yellow4clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
white5
,with a
white5clue,
Bob 🡲
white4
,with a
white4clue,
yellow1
,with a
yellow1clue,
red4
,with a
red4clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Bob now knows his newest card is the next playable in the sequence (
    red2
    ,with a
    red2clue,
    ), and the other marked card is
    red3
    ,with a
    red3clue,
    ,
    red4
    ,with a
    red4clue,
    or
    red5
    ,with a
    red5clue,
    (because every marked card will be playable at some point).
Standard convention: Prompt
red2
,with a
red2clue,
yellow5
,with a
yellow5clue,
green1
,with a
green1clue,
blue3
,with a
blue3clue,
white4
,with a
white4clue,
blue5
,with a
blue5clue,
yellow4
,with a
yellow4clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
white5
,with a
white5clue,
Bob 🡲
white2
,with a
white2clue,
white4
,with a
white4clue,
yellow1
,with a
yellow1clue,
red4
,with a
red4clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Alice to Cathy: this card is red.
red2
,with a
red2clue,
yellow5
,with a
yellow5clue,
green1
,with a
green1clue,
blue3
,with a
blue3clue,
white4
,with a
white4clue,
blue5
,with a
blue5clue,
yellow4
,with a
yellow4clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
white5
,with a
white5clue,
Bob 🡲
white2
,with a
white2clue,
white4
,with a
white4clue,
yellow1
,with a
yellow1clue,
red4
,with a
red4clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Cathy now knows her marked card is the next playable in the sequence ⇨
    red4
    ,with a
    red4clue,
    , because
    red3
    ,with a
    red3clue,
    is already marked.
  • Bob now knows his marked red card is
    red3
    ,with a
    red3clue,
    and he must play it now.

Finesse convention

Players assume:

  • Standard convention
  • Play clues may also include the newest, unmarked cards in every hand.
Finesse example
red
,with a
redclue,
yellow
,with a
yellowclue,
green
,with a
greenclue,
blue
,with a
blueclue,
white
,with a
whiteclue,
blue1
,with a
blue1clue,
red5
,with a
red5clue,
blue3
,with a
blue3clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
Bob 🡲
red5
,with a
red5clue,
red2
,with a
red2clue,
blue2
,with a
blue2clue,
green2
,with a
green2clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Alice to Cathy: this card is blue.
red
,with a
redclue,
yellow
,with a
yellowclue,
green
,with a
greenclue,
blue
,with a
blueclue,
white
,with a
whiteclue,
blue1
,with a
blue1clue,
red5
,with a
red5clue,
blue3
,with a
blue3clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
Bob 🡲
red5
,with a
red5clue,
red2
,with a
red2clue,
blue2
,with a
blue2clue,
green2
,with a
green2clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Cathy now knows her marked card
    blue2
    ,with a
    blue2clue,
    is playable.
  • Bob knows that Cathy will bomb her
    blue2
    ,with a
    blue2clue,
    as
    blue1
    ,with a
    blue1clue,
    unless a
    blue1
    ,with a
    blue1clue,
    is played first.
  • Bob does not see the connecting
    blue1
    ,with a
    blue1clue,
    , so assumes he has to play it now.
  • Bob does not have a marked card that could be
    blue1
    ,with a
    blue1clue,
    , so Bob blind plays his newest unmarked card.
  • blue1
    ,with a
    blue1clue,
    successfully plays.
Reversed finesse example
red
,with a
redclue,
yellow
,with a
yellowclue,
green
,with a
greenclue,
blue
,with a
blueclue,
white
,with a
whiteclue,
red5
,with a
red5clue,
red2
,with a
red2clue,
blue2
,with a
blue2clue,
green2
,with a
green2clue,
Bob 🡲
blue1
,with a
blue1clue,
red5
,with a
red5clue,
blue3
,with a
blue3clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Alice to Bob: this card is blue.
red
,with a
redclue,
yellow
,with a
yellowclue,
green
,with a
greenclue,
blue
,with a
blueclue,
white
,with a
whiteclue,
red5
,with a
red5clue,
red2
,with a
red2clue,
blue2
,with a
blue2clue,
green2
,with a
green2clue,
Bob 🡲
blue1
,with a
blue1clue,
red5
,with a
red5clue,
blue3
,with a
blue3clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Bob now knows his marked
    blue2
    ,with a
    blue2clue,
    is playable.
  • Bob sees the newest, unmarked card in Cathy's hand is of the same colour and playable now. Bob assumes it is a finesse with the players in reversed order and his blue card is
    blue2
    ,with a
    blue2clue,
    .
Bluff example
red
,with a
redclue,
yellow
,with a
yellowclue,
green
,with a
greenclue,
blue
,with a
blueclue,
white
,with a
whiteclue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
red5
,with a
red5clue,
blue3
,with a
blue3clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
Bob 🡲
red5
,with a
red5clue,
red2
,with a
red2clue,
blue2
,with a
blue2clue,
green2
,with a
green2clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Alice to Cathy: this card is blue.
red
,with a
redclue,
yellow
,with a
yellowclue,
green
,with a
greenclue,
blue
,with a
blueclue,
white
,with a
whiteclue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
red5
,with a
red5clue,
blue3
,with a
blue3clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
Bob 🡲
red5
,with a
red5clue,
red2
,with a
red2clue,
blue2
,with a
blue2clue,
green2
,with a
green2clue,
Cathy 🡲
  • Cathy now knows her marked card
    blue2
    ,with a
    blue2clue,
    is playable.
  • Bob does not see the connecting
    blue1
    ,with a
    blue1clue,
    , so assumes he has to play it now.
  • Bob does not have a marked card that could be
    blue1
    ,with a
    blue1clue,
    , so Bob blind plays his newest unmarked card.
  • white1
    ,with a
    white1clue,
    successfully plays and the bluff is revealed.
  • Before Bob played, Cathy thought her marked card was
    blue1
    ,with a
    blue1clue,
    .
  • After Bob plays, Cathy knows her marked card is another valuable blue card.

All conventions interpret Cathy's card as a valuable, not-yet-playable blue card.

Some interpretations are more stringent, also must be a 1-away-from-playable
blue2
,with a
blue2clue,
.

Marked card discard

If a non-trash marked card is discarded it means:

  • A copy of that card is already marked in someone else's hand (sarcastic discard); or
  • A copy of that card must be marked in a future save clue (use with caution); or
  • An unmarked copy of that card is playable (gentleman's discard)

Definitions

Basic

Convention: Agreed set of clue, play and discard interpretations. e.g. a number clue that marks the chop card should be interpreted as a unique card save (if there is a unique card of that number).

Strategy: Plan to achieve the highest score. e.g. to mark first copies of cards.

Marked: A card touched by a clue.

Focus: The target card of a clue.

Play clue: Clue that marks a focused card to play.

Playable: A card that can be marked by a play clue.

Trash: A card that can never be played successfully.

Bomb: A play that causes a misfire.

Draw: The newest card in a hand.

Chop: The oldest, unmarked card in a hand.

Unique: The last remaining card of its rank and colour (that can be played successfully at some point).

Save: A (number) clue that marks a chop card to prevent discard.

Prompt: A play clue that causes connecting marked card(s) to play.

Intermediate

Good Touch Principle: All marked cards will eventually be played.

Splash: Additional new colour or rank information of cards that are not the focus.

Locked: A hand with all cards marked without any plays.

Reclue: A repeated clue that causes marked card(s) to play.

Fix clue: Follow-up clue required to change the focus of a play clue (and prevent a misfire).

Discard clue: Clue that marks trash card(s) to be discarded (to prevent a misfire or unwanted discard).

Stall clue: A clue given to avoid discarding.

Finesse: A play clue that causes connecting unmarked card(s) to play.

Bluff: A play clue that causes a non-connecting unmarked card to play immediately.

Bluff seat: The player directly before the player who is bluffed.

Bottom-decked: When the remaining copy of a playable card is too near the bottom of the deck to achieve a perfect score.

Early save: A save clue with a known playable card in the same hand, or does not mark the chop card¹. i.e. a play clue.

Double save: Two consecutive saves in the same hand.

Double discard: Two consecutive players discard copies of the same chop card, resulting in a unique discard. A special problem, since, to each of the consecutive players, a number clue that marks their chop card does not look like a save clue (and therefore looks like a play clue).

Sarcastic discard: Discard of a duplicate marked copy of a card in another hand.

Skip / steal: When a player gives a clue that could have been given by one of the skipped players.

Scream discard: An unexpected discard to save a unique card in another hand.

Advanced

Long finesse: A finesse of three or more cards lasting more than one complete round.

Layered finesse: A finesse with unrelated playable card(s) in front of the target card(s).

Scream play: An unexpected chop play to save a unique card in another hand.

Clued misplay: A play clue that causes a misfire to prevent a unique discard in the same hand.

Positional misplay: An unexpected play that marks the same slot position in another hand to play immediately.

Gentleman's discard: Discard of a playable card to play an unmarked copy in another hand.

Play refusal: Instead of playing, a player clues or discards their chop.

Hesitation play: After a play refusal of a playable card, another player may be able to blind play an unmarked card.

Generation discard: An unexpected discard to gain 1clue tokens.

Options

Colors

Normal: 5 colors

50 cards
Red (r)
red1
,with a
red1clue,
red1
,with a
red1clue,
red1
,with a
red1clue,
red2
,with a
red2clue,
red2
,with a
red2clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
red3
,with a
red3clue,
red4
,with a
red4clue,
red4
,with a
red4clue,
red5
,with a
red5clue,
Yellow (y)
yellow1
,with a
yellow1clue,
yellow1
,with a
yellow1clue,
yellow1
,with a
yellow1clue,
yellow2
,with a
yellow2clue,
yellow2
,with a
yellow2clue,
yellow3
,with a
yellow3clue,
yellow3
,with a
yellow3clue,
yellow4
,with a
yellow4clue,
yellow4
,with a
yellow4clue,
yellow5
,with a
yellow5clue,
Green (g)
green1
,with a
green1clue,
green1
,with a
green1clue,
green1
,with a
green1clue,
green2
,with a
green2clue,
green2
,with a
green2clue,
green3
,with a
green3clue,
green3
,with a
green3clue,
green4
,with a
green4clue,
green4
,with a
green4clue,
green5
,with a
green5clue,
Blue (b)
blue1
,with a
blue1clue,
blue1
,with a
blue1clue,
blue1
,with a
blue1clue,
blue2
,with a
blue2clue,
blue2
,with a
blue2clue,
blue3
,with a
blue3clue,
blue3
,with a
blue3clue,
blue4
,with a
blue4clue,
blue4
,with a
blue4clue,
blue5
,with a
blue5clue,
White (w)
white1
,with a
white1clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
white1
,with a
white1clue,
white2
,with a
white2clue,
white2
,with a
white2clue,
white3
,with a
white3clue,
white3
,with a
white3clue,
white4
,with a
white4clue,
white4
,with a
white4clue,
white5
,with a
white5clue,

Tricky: 6th color (10 cards)

  • These cards are marked by a separate multicolour clue.
+10 cards
Multicolour (m)
multicolour1
,with a
multicolour1clue,
multicolour1
,with a
multicolour1clue,
multicolour1
,with a
multicolour1clue,
multicolour2
,with a
multicolour2clue,
multicolour2
,with a
multicolour2clue,
multicolour3
,with a
multicolour3clue,
multicolour3
,with a
multicolour3clue,
multicolour4
,with a
multicolour4clue,
multicolour4
,with a
multicolour4clue,
multicolour5
,with a
multicolour5clue,

Difficult: 6th color (5 cards)

  • These cards are marked by a separate multicolour clue.
+5 cards
Multicolour (m)
multicolour1
,with a
multicolour1clue,
multicolour2
,with a
multicolour2clue,
multicolour3
,with a
multicolour3clue,
multicolour4
,with a
multicolour4clue,
multicolour5
,with a
multicolour5clue,

Avalanche of Colors: Multicolor (10 multicolor)

  • These cards are marked by any colour clue.
+10 cards
Multicolour (m)
multicolour1
,with a
multicolour1clue,
multicolour1
,with a
multicolour1clue,
multicolour1
,with a
multicolour1clue,
multicolour2
,with a
multicolour2clue,
multicolour2
,with a
multicolour2clue,
multicolour3
,with a
multicolour3clue,
multicolour3
,with a
multicolour3clue,
multicolour4
,with a
multicolour4clue,
multicolour4
,with a
multicolour4clue,
multicolour5
,with a
multicolour5clue,

Black Powder

  • Clues cannot be given for the colour black.
  • Black cards must be played in reverse order 5 ⇨ 4 ⇨ 3 ⇨ 2 ⇨ 1.
+10 cards
Black Powder (p/k)
black powder5
,with a
black powder5clue,
black powder5
,with a
black powder5clue,
black powder5
,with a
black powder5clue,
black powder4
,with a
black powder4clue,
black powder4
,with a
black powder4clue,
black powder3
,with a
black powder3clue,
black powder3
,with a
black powder3clue,
black powder2
,with a
black powder2clue,
black powder2
,with a
black powder2clue,
black powder1
,with a
black powder1clue,

5 flamboyants

After playing the last card of a colour, randomly draw a bonus card and apply its effect:

  1. Gain 1clue tokens
  2. Gain 1clue tokens and recover a life.
  3. Give a colour clue.
  4. Give a number clue.
  5. Shuffle a discarded card into the deck (optional).
  6. Play a discarded card (optional).

Convention used

Name Summary References
Standard BGA convention without blind-plays. Standard convention above

Hanabi "reference" for bga

Finesse BGA convention with blind-plays. Finesse convention above

Hanabi "reference" for bga

Hat-guessing Clues relate to slot position, not the cards marked. H-Group

Robert Kaspar

H-Group empty clues

Logical Leftism No convention, just logic. hanabi logic
Closest Friend Clue interpretation depends on which player gave the clue. H-Group
Secret convention Each player randomly selects a secret restriction. Secret variant

Secret hanabi restriction

Conventional Leftism Same as Standard. hanabi logic

Postmans

Chop-focus The focus of a clue that marks a chop card is always the chop card. H-Group

Preset deck

Preset decks are useful for comparing teams/conventions using the same deck:

  • No (cards are shuffled)
  • Preset deck #1 of the day
  • Preset deck #2 of the day
  • Preset deck #3 of the day
  • Preset deck #4 of the day
  • Preset deck #5 of the day

Preset decks are changed at 0:00 (?) UTC

Unofficial variant

Deal
# Players 2 3 4 5
# Cards 6 5 4 3

ELO rating

Rating is visibly hidden around tables with the 7 distinct ELO skill levels:

rank Beginner rank Apprentice rank Average rank Good rank Strong rank Expert rank Master.
  1. Hanabot's ELO is generated from:
    • Final score¹
    • Average team ELO
    • Colour option²
  2. ELO change is calculated as if tied with Hanabot.

Hanabots' ELO ratings were set by an experienced player - i.e. ratings are not random or simply proportional to score or players' ELO.

¹Hanabot's ELO = 0 with scores < 18 (5 colours) and < 21 (6 colours).

²+5 card multicolor option is unrated (too dependent on draw to reflect skill).

Cheating

  • Players can cheat at Hanabi by sharing information via the chat user interface. This is why ranking has been disabled for this game.