This invention relates to card games where cards are upturned.
A popular game particularly among children involves using cupped hands to direct a blast of air to the base of a pack of cards placed face down on a table or other flat surface, so as to upturn as many of the cards as possible. The player who exposes the most cards from the pack is the winner.
It can be challenging to produce an air blast of sufficient strength using cupped hands.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,624,121 discloses a game comprising a plurality of rigid playing discs stacked one on top of another, each player being provided with a turn for striking a topmost one of the playing discs towards a periphery thereof so as thereby to upturn a number of the playing discs in the stack, the player claiming for himself those discs whose upper surface is downmost. An object of the game is to maximize the number of upturned playing discs.
US2014287392 discloses a board game instrument including at least two projectiles, a launch pad, at least two baskets, a game board, and at least two magic cards. The projectiles are thrown in a basket using a launch pad, which launches the projectile using an elastic force.
U.S. Pat. No. 2,187,524 discloses game which utilizes a projector device, projectiles and a variably configured target area containing a plurality of individual targets.
None of these prior art games discloses a device that causes a blast of air to upturn cards from a stack.
DE8703225U1 discloses a joke article with jumping effect, characterized by a shell made of an elastic material, the bottom of the shell being able to be pressed in against the shell curvature beyond the edge of the shell. An air passage is provided in the shell at some distance from the edge and serves to prevent the shell adhering to a support surface under suction. It is noted that the air passage should neither be provided in the base region of the shell nor arranged directly on the edge.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,927,177 discloses a pop action toy ball assembly having separate lower and upper hemispherical sections joined together by a connection element anchored at one end to the apex of the lower hemispherical section and extending upwardly through the apex of the upper hemispherical section without being affixed thereto. The lower hemispherical section is selectively positionable between a normal orientation, where a first surface faces outwardly, and an inverted orientation, where a second surface faces outwardly. If the toy ball assembly is impacted while the lower hemispherical section is inverted, the toy assembly pops from its inverted orientation back into its normal orientation.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,803,033 discloses a pop action toy assembly having an elastomeric body that is defined primarily by a first surface and a second surface. The elastomeric body is selectively positionable between a normal orientation, where the first surface faces outwardly, and an inverted orientation, where the second surface faces outwardly. An activator assembly having an impact disc and a knob extends through the elastomeric body at its apex. The impact disc strikes the ground when the toy assembly pops from an inverted orientation back into its normal orientation. The knob is used to grasp, spin and throw the toy assembly when inverted. A plurality of tabs symmetrically protrude from the base rim of the elastomeric body. If the toy assembly is inverted and strikes the ground, the protruding tabs act to concentrate the force of the impact and cause the toy assembly to pop back into its normal orientation.
An object of the invention is to provide a device or accessory that may be used instead of cupping one's hands to a similar effect.
This object is achieved in accordance with an embodiment of the invention by a device comprising a flexible hollow cup-shaped member having a base portion defining a rim, and at least one recess or aperture formed in or proximate a portion of the rim so that when the base portion is placed on a generally flat surface, there is formed at least one opening that allows air to pass through when pressure is applied to an outer surface of the cup-shaped member.
In order to understand the invention and to see how it may be carried out in practice, embodiments will now be described, by way of non-limiting example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the following description of some embodiments, identical components that appear in more than one figure or that share similar functionality will be referenced by identical reference symbols.
With reference to the figures, there is shown a device 10 for flipping stacked cards 11 from a first position shown in
In a first embodiment shown in
The device 10 may be used to play a game for flipping cards, whose rules comprise:
The player who flips the most cards is the winner.
Typically, a player exerts pressure by pushing on the outer surface of the device with his or her hands 18.
It has been found experimentally that the first embodiment works particularly effectively and allows a skilled player to upturn all the cards in an average stack. The second and third embodiments were less effective although they did succeed in upturning many if not most of the cards in the stack. The fourth embodiment was also found to be extremely effective. The effectiveness of the apertures in
It should be noted that while the invention has been described with particular reference to regular playing cards as shown pictorially in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
262586 | Oct 2018 | IL | national |
263134 | Nov 2018 | IL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/IL2019/051137 | 10/22/2019 | WO | 00 |