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TO how many 'whips' do you have now? Last count I heard was 3.
You still ballin', or are you bunz?
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The above post may contain sarcasm. Brashear beat your favorite fighter. Undisputed top 5 all time. |
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And Retard just my civic man ...but this spring/summer I will be on a bike (harley)
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Fight Fight Fight |
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Brotorcycle.
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The above post may contain sarcasm. Brashear beat your favorite fighter. Undisputed top 5 all time. |
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Not to change the subject
![]() Anyone ever play Golf with either Uno or regular playing cards? Oddly enough the goal is to score the least amount of points in 18 or 9 rounds.
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A drink a day keeps the shrink away - Ed Abbey |
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I meant Skipbo, not UNO. That could be a variation of it. I am lazy and cut-and-pasted these rules from a website. I play the ten card version, Skipbo cards are worth -1 point.
Golf is a card game for two or more players, in which the object is to score as little as possible. In front of each player is a layout of cards arranged in a square or rectangle, and players improve their scores by drawing new cards to replace unwanted cards, which they discard. Each deal is seen as the equivalent of a hole of Golf, and in many versions a complete game consists of 9 or 18 deals, corresponding to the length of a Golf course. Each player has a layout of cards, initially face down, which can be successively replaced by new cards drawn from the stock or discard pile. The aim is to make a layout scoring as little as possible. The scores at the end of the play are sometimes considered as representing the number of strokes taken to play a hole of golf. It is common to play a series of nine deals or 'holes', at the end of which the player with the lowest total score wins. A major difference between versions of Golf is in the method of ending the play. The first method, used most often in 4-card Golf, is that if you think you have the lowest score you can use your turn to knock instead of drawing to replace one of your cards. This causes the play to end after each of the other players has taken one more turn. The second method, most often used with the 6-card and larger layouts, is that whenever a layout card is replaced, the new card is placed face up. The play ends as soon as any player's entire layout is face up.
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A drink a day keeps the shrink away - Ed Abbey |
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