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Historical Tarot Freecell
Historical playing cards are withesses of the past, they are icons of the social and economic reality of their time. On display in glass cabinets or stored in archives, ancient playing cards are no longer what they once were meant to be: a deck of cards made for playing games. This project aims at making historical playing cards playable again by means of the well-known solitaire card game “Freecell”.
Tarot Freecell is a fully playable solitaire card game coded in HTML 5. It offers random setup, autoplay, reset and undo options. The game features a historical 78-card deck used for games and divination. The cards were printed in the 1880s by J. Müller & Cie., Schaffhausen, Switzerland.
The cards are not reversible and use Roman numeral indexing. The lack of modern features like reversibility and Arabic numerals made the deck increasingly unpopular.
Due to the lack of point symmetry and corner indices (being core features of modern playing cards) the vertical card offset needs to be significantly higher than in other computer adaptations.
Updates
2015/02/27 v1.0: Basic game engine adapted to displaying historical playing cards
2015/02/28 v1.1: Help option with modern suit and value indices in the upper left corner
2015/03/21 v1.1: Retina card display and responsive design
Data
- Wikipedia: Tarot 1JJ
- Wikimedia Commons: Tarot 1JJ card set
Author
- Prof. Thomas Weibel, Thomas Weibel Multi & Media