| Fan-Tan, or fantan, is a form of gambling long played in China.
The game is simple. A square is marked in the centre of an ordinary table, or a square piece of metal is laid on it, the sides
being marked 1, 2, 3 and 4. The banker puts on the table a double handful of small coins in China cash or similar articles, which
he covers with a metal bowl. The players bet on the numbers, setting their stakes on the side of the square which bears the
number selected. When all have staked, the bowl is removed, and the banker or croupier with a small stick removes coins from the
heap, four at a time, till the final batch is reached. If it contains four coins, the backer of No. 4 wins; if three, the backer
of No. ~ wins, and so on. Twenty-five per cent is deducted from the stake by the banker, and the winner receives five times the
amount of his stake thus reduced. In Macao, play goes on day and night, every day of the
week, and bets can be made from 5 cents to 500 dollars, which are the limits.
Fantan is also the name of a card game, played with an ordinary pack, by any number of players up to eight. The, deal decided,
the cards are dealt singly, any that are left over forming a stock, and being placed face downwards on the table. Each player
contributes a fixed stake or ante. The first player can enter if he has an ace; if he has not he pays an ante and takes a card
from the stock; the second player is then called upon and acts similarly till an ace is played. This (and the other aces when
played) is put face upwards on the table, and the piles are built up from the ace to the king. The pool goes to the player who
first gets rid of all his cards. If a player fails to play, having a playable card, he is fined the amount of the ante for every
card in the other players hands.
This article incorporates text from the public domain 1911 Encyclopędia Britannica.
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