Twenty-Eight is a beloved card game popular in South Asia, especially in Kerala, India. It's a game of strategy, teamwork, and calculated risk where two teams compete to capture card points while keeping the trump suit a closely guarded secret.
The Goal
Work with your partner to either:
As the bidding team: Capture enough card points to meet your bid
As the opposing team: Prevent the bidding team from reaching their bid
The Teams
4 players sit around a virtual table
Team A: You and the player across from you (your partner)
Team B: The two players on your left and right (your opponents)
The Basics
The Cards
The game uses a special 32-card deck with only 8 cards per suit:
Card
Points
Strength
Jack (J)
3 points
Highest
Nine (9)
2 points
Second highest
Ace (A)
1 point
Third highest
Ten (10)
1 point
Fourth highest
King (K)
0 points
Fifth highest
Queen (Q)
0 points
Sixth highest
Eight (8)
0 points
Seventh highest
Seven (7)
0 points
Lowest
Important: Jacks and Nines are the most powerful cards, not Aces and Kings!
The total points in the deck add up to 28 — that's where the game gets its name.
Card Suits
The game uses the standard four suits:
♠ Spades (black)
♥ Hearts (red)
♦ Diamonds (red)
♣ Clubs (black)
What is Trump?
Trump is a special suit chosen by the bid winner
Trump cards beat ALL other suits
The lowest trump card beats the highest non-trump card
Trump is kept secret until someone reveals it
What is a Hand?
A hand is one round where each player plays one card
The highest card wins the hand
The winner of a hand leads the next one
There are 8 hands in each round
How to Play
Phase 1: Dealing
The dealer gives each player 4 cards
Look at your cards and assess their strength
Prepare to bid based on what you see
Phase 2: Bidding
This is where you predict how many points your team can capture.
How bidding works:
The player next to the dealer must start with a bid of at least 14
Going around the table, each player can either:
Bid higher than the current bid (up to 28)
Pass (skip their turn to bid)
You only get one chance to bid or pass
After 3 consecutive passes, bidding ends
The highest bidder wins and will choose the trump
Special rule: If your partner is currently the highest bidder, you can only bid 20 or higher (to prevent artificially raising your own team's bid).
Phase 3: Choosing Trump
The bid winner selects one card from their hand as the trump indicator
This card is set aside face-down (hidden from everyone)
The suit of this card becomes the trump suit
Nobody knows the trump suit yet — it's your secret!
Phase 4: Second Deal
Each player receives 4 more cards (now everyone has 8 cards)
Players may now raise the bid (minimum 24)
If someone raises, they become the new bid winner and choose a new trump
If nobody raises, the original bid winner keeps their trump
Phase 5: Playing
Now the real game begins!
Playing a hand:
One player leads by playing any card
Other players must follow suit if they can (play the same suit)
If you can't follow suit, you have two choices:
Play any other card (discard)
Reveal trump and play a trump card
Who wins the hand:
If trump was played: Highest trump wins
If no trump: Highest card of the led suit wins
Winner collects the points from all 4 cards
About revealing trump:
Only reveal trump when you can't follow suit
Once revealed, the hidden trump card returns to the bid winner's hand
The player who revealed trump must play a trump card if they have one
Once trump is revealed, everyone knows the trump suit
Scoring & Winning
After Each Round
After all 8 hands are played:
If the bidding team captured points ≥ their bid:
They WIN the round
Points transferred from opponents:
Bid of 14-19: +1 point
Bid of 20+: +2 points
If the bidding team captured points < their bid:
They LOSE the round
Points transferred to opponents:
Bid of 14-19: +2 points
Bid of 20+: +3 points
Winning the Game
Each team starts with 6 points
Points transfer between teams after each round
First team to reduce the opponent to 0 points wins!
Think of it like this: You're trying to take all your opponent's points while protecting your own.
Single Player Mode
Getting Started
Enter your name
Click "Single Player"
Optionally adjust settings:
AI Difficulty: Easy, Medium, or Hard
Play Direction: Clockwise or Counter-clockwise
AI Names: Customize your opponents' names
Playing Against AI
You play at the bottom of the screen
Your partner (AI) sits across from you at the top
Your opponents (AI) sit on the left and right
The AI will make decisions automatically when it's their turn
Game History
Your games are automatically saved
View your history from the main menu
Track your wins, losses, and statistics
Multiplayer Mode
Creating a Room
Enter your name
Click "Create Room"
Share the 6-character room code with friends
Or share the instant join link
Wait for players to join (AI fills empty seats)
Click "Start Game" when ready
Joining a Room
Enter your name
Either:
Click "Join Room" and enter the room code
Use the instant join link shared with you
Wait for the host to start the game
Room Management (Host Only)
Swap players: Rearrange who sits where
Start Game: Begin when ready (2-4 human players)
AI fills seats: Empty seats become AI players
Tips & Strategies
Bidding Strategy
Count your high cards: Jacks and Nines are gold
Consider your suits: Having many cards in one suit is strong
Don't overbid: Better to win a low bid than lose a high one
Watch your partner: If they bid high, they probably have good cards
Trump Strategy
Choose your strongest suit: Pick the suit where you have the Jack or Nine
Keep trump secret: Don't reveal unless necessary
Time your reveal: Reveal trump when you can win a valuable hand
Save your high trumps: Don't waste the Jack of trump early
Playing Strategy
Lead with strength: Start with your strong cards to establish control
Watch what's played: Remember which high cards have been used
Protect your partner: Sometimes losing a hand helps your partner win later
Count points: Know how many points have been won by each team
Force trump out: Lead suits where opponents might have to reveal trump
Team Coordination
Signal to your partner: Your plays can communicate information
Trust your partner: They might have a plan you don't see
Share the lead: Let your partner lead sometimes
Cover each other: If partner plays low, you might need to play high
Frequently Asked Questions
General Questions
Q: Why is it called Twenty-Eight?
A: The total card points in the deck (J=3, 9=2, A=1, 10=1 × 4 suits) equals 28.
Q: How long does a game take?
A: A single round takes 5-10 minutes. A full game (until one team reaches 0) usually takes 20-40 minutes.
Q: Can I play with just 2 players?
A: Yes! In multiplayer, empty seats are filled by AI players.
Bidding Questions
Q: What if nobody wants to bid?
A: The first player MUST open with at least 14. After that, others can pass.
Q: Can I bid twice?
A: No, you only get one chance to bid or pass in each phase.
Q: What's a good bid?
A: With strong cards (multiple Jacks/Nines), bid 16-20. With average cards, consider passing.
Trump Questions
Q: When should I reveal trump?
A: Only when you can't follow suit AND you want to win the hand with trump.
Q: What happens to the trump card when revealed?
A: It returns to the bid winner's hand, giving them an extra card to play.
Q: Can I reveal trump when leading?
A: No, you can only reveal trump when you cannot follow the led suit.
Playing Questions
Q: Do I have to follow suit?
A: Yes, if you have a card of the led suit, you must play it.
Q: Can I play trump whenever I want?
A: Only if you can't follow suit. Then you can reveal trump and play it.
Q: Who leads the first hand?
A: The player next to the dealer leads the first hand after trump is set.
Quick Reference
Card Ranking
J → 9 → A → 10 → K → Q → 8 → 7
Card Points
J: 3 | 9: 2 | A: 1 | 10: 1 | Others: 0
Bid Range
Min: 14 | Max: 28 | Raise min: 24
Starting Points
Each team starts with 6 points
Scoring Summary
Bid Type
Win
Lose
Low (14-19)
+1 point
-2 points
High (20+)
+2 points
-3 points
Key Rules
Must follow suit if possible
Trump beats all other suits
Only reveal trump when you can't follow suit
Highest card of led suit wins (unless trump played)