I have the 2022 edition of this game, which uses number cards 0 to 10; the rules for that version state that because an ONO 99 card is an instant loss, the card cannot be played normally and merely takes up space in a players hand. However, the 2022 rules also state that if a player accumulates 4 total ONO 99 cards, they are allowed to discard the entire hand without penalty and draw four new cards. This doesn't change the running total of the pile when this happens.
I noticed that too. Further, I don't recall the original 1981 rules saying anything about an O'NO 99 card being an instant loss. In the original game, as I recall, an O'NO 99 card could only be played if the current board total was 0 or lower; i.e. at the start of the round. Otherwise, you were stuck with the thing for the rest of the round.
@@ThreePointOneFou You are correct. By playing the ONO 99 card in that manner, it acted as a hold. Otherwise, if the total was above 0 and you had four ONO 99 cards, you lost.
Variation: O’no 99 will increase the discards total value by 99, instead of increasing it to 99. If you played it while the current discarded cards value is a negative number, you will not lose the game. If you somehow bring the value down to -99, you automatically win and everyone else loses. You can also play alternative version where you must bring the discard piles total exactly 99. If you can place the final card to make the total exactly 99, you win. If you overshoot it, you lose.
@@Faroshkas For the first variation, the 99 on the first hand doesn't change anything. It's if it's LOWERED to NEGATIVE 99. Which is a LOT harder. The second version seems more like a cooperative game variant, where the table tries to strategize their way to 99 without overshooting as opposed to trying to get others knocked out. Not sure if that's what the original commenter was thinking either, but that's how I'm thinking of it. And for that variant, you can probably just remove the O'NO 99 cards from the deck or reshuffle if you get one to avoid first-turn wins.
Here are some house rules I came up with. If you bring the value to EXACTLY 99, you _win_ the game instead of _losing._ It's similar to Blackjack's 21 rule. If this is done in the chip gamemode, you regain a chip if you do not already have 3. Otherwise, you stay at 3 chips and the next round starts.
In korea, we used to play a very similar card game to this, called lobo 77 The only differences are you die in 77 or more, and the exact sum values of 11/22/33/44/55/66 also make you lose 1 life, but the round doesnt end, and there are some high number cards(11/22/33/44/55/66/76)
@ttterg6152 the card set : 3 cards each : 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 8 '10' cards 1 card each : 11, 22, 33, 44, 55, 66, 76 4 '0' cards, which is basically the same as 'Hold' in this game 4 '-10' cards 4 '×2' cards, which works like double play in o'no 99 5 reverse cards, which is the same with reverse cards in this game
Extra rule change : 0 is just +0, so it doesn't pass the obligation made by the ×2 card to play 2 cards to the next player You may not play reverse card as the first card when you have to play 2 cards because of the ×2 card If the previous person ended up with the multiple of 11 and lost 1 life, and if you don't change the number by playing 0/×2/reverse, you also lose 1 life because at the end of your turn the sum is still the multiple of 11
I have recently bought a card game called "Alive". Its objective is the same - to stay under a certain sum in the discard pile (In this game it is 21) By going over 21, you lose 1 health (You are given 5 health in the beginning, after reaching 0 health, you are eliminated from the match). I don't know which one came first, but I think that "Alive" is more interesting, as it has more depth and action cards.
Saw the cards, remembered I used to have this but didn't remember or know how to play. Might have to look around again and see if still have these. Would like to see a video on Stone Wall (New Zealand game that's sometimes hard to find info on) or Lucky Plus if possible please.
I bet you can just use a normal Uno deck Where a skip (🚫) card works like a hold A draw 2 card works like a double play And the wild draw 4 card works as a o'no 99 card And wild cards are just like -10 cards And zeros are just 10's
There seems to be a lot of confusion in the comments, pparticularly centering on the O'NO 99 card and when itvcan be played. There are two versions of this game: the 1981 original, the cards for which are used in the video; and the 2020 edition, which is shown in the thumbnail. There are some differences in the rulesets for the two versions; I'm trying to track down an online copy of the 1981 rules (I have a copy of the 2020 edition, so I can refer to those directly).
I own a copy of the older version that you are referring to. The external packaging is dated 1983, but the included instructions are dated 1980/1981. The instructions regarding O'NO 99 cards are as follows: "THE O'NO 99 CARD: CANNOT BE PLAYED. If you are dealt -- or draw the O'NO 99 card, you must keep it and not play it. This leaves you only three good cards to play. The O'NO 99 card can make the game harder to play, especially if you have two or more of them in one hand. In the event that you have only O'NO 99 cards in your hand, when it is your turn to play you automatically lose, you cannot play." So in essence, it's a junk card that can never be played to the discard pile and only exists to take up space in your hand and handicap you, and in the rare instance that one player is particularly unlucky and is stuck with all 4 O'NO 99 cards in the deck they are eliminated from play.
@@JaxHahn Thanks for that. There are effectively two versions of this game, then-the 1981 original, with only 56 cards, the chips mentioned in the video, and the unplayable O'NO 99 card; and the 2020 version, with 112 cards and the rule about four O'NO 99's.
I once played a similar game. There it was the first to bring the stack over 50 to lose. So the "set to 50" card wasn't a game-over, but would put the next person in a choke, forcing them to play a 0, a -2 or another "set to 50".
I’ve basically played this as a regular card game called 99. 9s are holds, 4s are reverses, 10s are -10, and face cards are +10s. It doesn’t have the double play, though. I should start using that! Edit: Another major difference: getting to 99 doesn’t lose you the game - getting OVER 99 does. Kings bring it straight to 99, or if it’s already 99, basically function as a hold.
The lowest possible number in the game is -10 here is a example you play a -10 so it is now -10 and the highest is 109 here is a example you play a ono 99 card then the next player plays a 10 and that is 109 so the range is a number from -10 to 109
In the 1981 edition, nothing (apart from the fact that there were only four of those cards in the game). In the 2020 edition, a -10 card cannot be played if doing so would make the total negative.
112 Cards (2022 edition) as follows: • 72 Number Cards (8x 0s/Holds, 6x 1-9s, 10x 10s) • 10 Reverse Cards • 10 Minus 10 Cards • 10 Double Play/Play 2 Cards • 10 ONO 99 Cards The original 1980 version only has 54 cards.
This is very similar to the game 99. You use a standard deck of cards. You have 2 cards in hand. You lose if you bring the total to more than 99. A 2 brings the total to 99, which does not lose you the game. A 5 reverses, a 7 counts 0, a 10 subtracts 10 and a court card counts 10.
The older version I knew had a slightly different rule for the ONO 99 cards: you could only play them safely if the discard pile total was either zero or a multiple of 10. Playing an ONO 99 card in that situation was like playing a Hold card. Conversely, if you got all four ONO 99 cards in your hand and could not legally play one on your turn, you instantly lost the game.
I love this game. But, I always played that the “ONO 99” cards only be played if the current pile total ends in 0, eg; 0, 10, 20, 30, etc. and don’t affect the total at all. Otherwise they just take up a card slot in your hand.
@@ManosSef Or, when the player before you played double play, and all you have is either double play, which couldn't be played as the first card, or o'no99
It gives you an unplayable card, restricting your options and increasing the odds that you'll be forced out of the game. In the 2022 edition, however, if you wind up with four of them in your hand, at your next turn you can discard them all and draw for new cards without adding anything to the total.
You're supposed to draw a card from the deck every time you play one (two cards, if you were forced to play two), so that you always have four cards in your hand. If you forget to do this and someone catches you, you're immediately obligated to play one of your remaining cards and then draw enough cards from the deck to make four.
So...what happens if you keep forgetting to draw and end up with 0 cards in hand; especially if you intentionally do it. I feel like not being able to play a card would be a boon in this game.
I have the 2022 edition of this game, which uses number cards 0 to 10; the rules for that version state that because an ONO 99 card is an instant loss, the card cannot be played normally and merely takes up space in a players hand. However, the 2022 rules also state that if a player accumulates 4 total ONO 99 cards, they are allowed to discard the entire hand without penalty and draw four new cards. This doesn't change the running total of the pile when this happens.
I noticed that too. Further, I don't recall the original 1981 rules saying anything about an O'NO 99 card being an instant loss. In the original game, as I recall, an O'NO 99 card could only be played if the current board total was 0 or lower; i.e. at the start of the round. Otherwise, you were stuck with the thing for the rest of the round.
@@ThreePointOneFou You are correct. By playing the ONO 99 card in that manner, it acted as a hold. Otherwise, if the total was above 0 and you had four ONO 99 cards, you lost.
Same
New rules also say you cannot have a negative pile discard pile amount.
This card game way more different than Uno, Dos, Skip-Bo and Phase 10.
But it is from the makers of UNO.
@Ambush_games_wow.oh no
And uno flip
And uno flip, uno all wild, uno minecraft, and uno dare
And uno mario
Variation:
O’no 99 will increase the discards total value by 99, instead of increasing it to 99. If you played it while the current discarded cards value is a negative number, you will not lose the game. If you somehow bring the value down to -99, you automatically win and everyone else loses.
You can also play alternative version where you must bring the discard piles total exactly 99. If you can place the final card to make the total exactly 99, you win. If you overshoot it, you lose.
The first idea is idiotic. If the person gets 99 on his first hand, the games over. The second is also a bit bogus.
@@Faroshkas
For the first variation, the 99 on the first hand doesn't change anything. It's if it's LOWERED to NEGATIVE 99. Which is a LOT harder.
The second version seems more like a cooperative game variant, where the table tries to strategize their way to 99 without overshooting as opposed to trying to get others knocked out. Not sure if that's what the original commenter was thinking either, but that's how I'm thinking of it. And for that variant, you can probably just remove the O'NO 99 cards from the deck or reshuffle if you get one to avoid first-turn wins.
99-10=89
You can end the game early with this
Here are some house rules I came up with.
If you bring the value to EXACTLY 99, you _win_ the game instead of _losing._ It's similar to Blackjack's 21 rule.
If this is done in the chip gamemode, you regain a chip if you do not already have 3. Otherwise, you stay at 3 chips and the next round starts.
Yeah but then the ONO 99 card is an automatic win
I also made a rule change just for this:
The O’No 99 card will increase the Discard Pile total Value BY 99 instead of increasing it TO 99.
@@omega97orsmthidfk Oops. My bad. @addisonfung5009, thank you for adding on to my idea!
In korea, we used to play a very similar card game to this, called lobo 77
The only differences are you die in 77 or more, and the exact sum values of 11/22/33/44/55/66 also make you lose 1 life, but the round doesnt end, and there are some high number cards(11/22/33/44/55/66/76)
That sounds a lot more fun than the game in the video. Do you remember any special cards so that i can make a copy to play with friends?
@ttterg6152 the card set :
3 cards each : 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
8 '10' cards
1 card each : 11, 22, 33, 44, 55, 66, 76
4 '0' cards, which is basically the same as 'Hold' in this game
4 '-10' cards
4 '×2' cards, which works like double play in o'no 99
5 reverse cards, which is the same with reverse cards in this game
Extra rule change : 0 is just +0, so it doesn't pass the obligation made by the ×2 card to play 2 cards to the next player
You may not play reverse card as the first card when you have to play 2 cards because of the ×2 card
If the previous person ended up with the multiple of 11 and lost 1 life, and if you don't change the number by playing 0/×2/reverse, you also lose 1 life because at the end of your turn the sum is still the multiple of 11
north korea?
as a south Korean i know that game
First, you made a tutorial on how to play 99, now you came out with ONO 99. Congratulations, you played yourself.
Except in the traditional game of 99, getting to 99 doesn’t lose, but going over 99 does
I grew up playing this game knowing it as "Sums up". Definitely getting a copy of this game now!
ONO99 is the same thing as regular 99 with changes. Use refresher rules of 99.
I have recently bought a card game called "Alive". Its objective is the same - to stay under a certain sum in the discard pile (In this game it is 21) By going over 21, you lose 1 health (You are given 5 health in the beginning, after reaching 0 health, you are eliminated from the match). I don't know which one came first, but I think that "Alive" is more interesting, as it has more depth and action cards.
Saw the cards, remembered I used to have this but didn't remember or know how to play. Might have to look around again and see if still have these.
Would like to see a video on Stone Wall (New Zealand game that's sometimes hard to find info on) or Lucky Plus if possible please.
I've always wanted to learn this game from you, Jim!
I bet you can just use a normal Uno deck
Where a skip (🚫) card works like a hold
A draw 2 card works like a double play
And the wild draw 4 card works as a o'no 99 card
And wild cards are just like -10 cards
And zeros are just 10's
or i can just buy ono 99 for $7.99
This game is incredible. I’d play it during lunch at work almost every day. So much more intense that uno
There seems to be a lot of confusion in the comments, pparticularly centering on the O'NO 99 card and when itvcan be played. There are two versions of this game: the 1981 original, the cards for which are used in the video; and the 2020 edition, which is shown in the thumbnail. There are some differences in the rulesets for the two versions; I'm trying to track down an online copy of the 1981 rules (I have a copy of the 2020 edition, so I can refer to those directly).
I own a copy of the older version that you are referring to. The external packaging is dated 1983, but the included instructions are dated 1980/1981. The instructions regarding O'NO 99 cards are as follows:
"THE O'NO 99 CARD: CANNOT BE PLAYED. If you are dealt -- or draw the O'NO 99 card, you must keep it and not play it. This leaves you only three good cards to play. The O'NO 99 card can make the game harder to play, especially if you have two or more of them in one hand. In the event that you have only O'NO 99 cards in your hand, when it is your turn to play you automatically lose, you cannot play."
So in essence, it's a junk card that can never be played to the discard pile and only exists to take up space in your hand and handicap you, and in the rare instance that one player is particularly unlucky and is stuck with all 4 O'NO 99 cards in the deck they are eliminated from play.
@@JaxHahn Thanks for that. There are effectively two versions of this game, then-the 1981 original, with only 56 cards, the chips mentioned in the video, and the unplayable O'NO 99 card; and the 2020 version, with 112 cards and the rule about four O'NO 99's.
I once played a similar game. There it was the first to bring the stack over 50 to lose. So the "set to 50" card wasn't a game-over, but would put the next person in a choke, forcing them to play a 0, a -2 or another "set to 50".
Please, do how to play The Battle of Polytopia
The aesthetic of this card game reminds me of 70s prime time television
The Hold is replaced to 0 and the Double Play is replaced to Play 2
I’ve basically played this as a regular card game called 99. 9s are holds, 4s are reverses, 10s are -10, and face cards are +10s. It doesn’t have the double play, though. I should start using that!
Edit: Another major difference: getting to 99 doesn’t lose you the game - getting OVER 99 does. Kings bring it straight to 99, or if it’s already 99, basically function as a hold.
The lowest possible number in the game is -10 here is a example you play a -10 so it is now -10 and the highest is 109 here is a example you play a ono 99 card then the next player plays a 10 and that is 109 so the range is a number from -10 to 109
...okay, but what stops a player from playing another -10 card to push the value even lower?
In the 1981 edition, nothing (apart from the fact that there were only four of those cards in the game). In the 2020 edition, a -10 card cannot be played if doing so would make the total negative.
The O’NO 99 card is so OP
I recommend 5 Alive.
It’s similar, but you can’t go above 21, and if you do, you lose a life. (And En Passant is not allowed)
That looks like a very interesting card game.
112 Cards (2022 edition) as follows:
• 72 Number Cards
(8x 0s/Holds, 6x 1-9s, 10x 10s)
• 10 Reverse Cards
• 10 Minus 10 Cards
• 10 Double Play/Play 2 Cards
• 10 ONO 99 Cards
The original 1980 version only has 54 cards.
This is very similar to the game 99. You use a standard deck of cards. You have 2 cards in hand. You lose if you bring the total to more than 99. A 2 brings the total to 99, which does not lose you the game. A 5 reverses, a 7 counts 0, a 10 subtracts 10 and a court card counts 10.
The older version I knew had a slightly different rule for the ONO 99 cards: you could only play them safely if the discard pile total was either zero or a multiple of 10. Playing an ONO 99 card in that situation was like playing a Hold card.
Conversely, if you got all four ONO 99 cards in your hand and could not legally play one on your turn, you instantly lost the game.
Wow, they still make the vintage card designs from back in the 80s?
Triple s game can you now make how to play 3up 3down?
Triple S Games can you do a tutorial of 5 Alive Card Game?
I love this game. But, I always played that the “ONO 99” cards only be played if the current pile total ends in 0, eg; 0, 10, 20, 30, etc. and don’t affect the total at all. Otherwise they just take up a card slot in your hand.
i would use a Stack rule for the Double Play cards, similar to the Stacking rules for Plusses in UNO
How would the »o'no99« card come to be played?
I think that's just like a landmine card, which permanently disadvantages you by one less options to play
@@crowreligion Yeah, but I don't see the »play« part here. Just a random obstacle without any ways to mitigate it. There is no strategy around it.
I guess if you are unlucky enough so that all of your cards are this card, you will be forced to play it.
@@ManosSef Or, when the player before you played double play, and all you have is either double play, which couldn't be played as the first card, or o'no99
Do “How to play Zombie Dodgeball”
1:39 But what if ALL of your cards are Double Plays?
You can use the double play
Oh no ! 99... 😖 From the Uno serie, this is pretty clever 😊
1:44-1:51. So what's the point of the ONO card anyway if you're just gonna lose if you use it?
It gives you an unplayable card, restricting your options and increasing the odds that you'll be forced out of the game. In the 2022 edition, however, if you wind up with four of them in your hand, at your next turn you can discard them all and draw for new cards without adding anything to the total.
O'no 99 was derived from a game made locally in Phoenix, "Jimbo's 99".
Your big fan
One day he'll do the la casa de papel (money heist) card game. I've been waiting for more than a year
This was the 80s version. Can you do the recent version?
yeah, I probably should do that
Why in this version the font of the numbers are the 31 Minutos font
this is new
i like it
I love UNO!❤
"The rules are the same as regular un-" wait IT'S NOT THERE?!
O No
99@@olgacuervo4305
Can you do Yamslam? Thanks!
Perfect for elementary school kids math!!!!❤
"The rules are same as regular Uno, except for these changes."
you forgot(probably):if a player gets 4 "ono99" in hand, discard all and draw 4 new cards
that's in the 2020 rules, this vid consists of the 1980 rules.
I misread as “UNO 99”, don’t ask why.
tetris 99 but uno
@@TerraKnight27 imagine UNO but with 99 players
Same
do u keep drawing cards from the deck what happens if you have no cards left?
You're supposed to draw a card from the deck every time you play one (two cards, if you were forced to play two), so that you always have four cards in your hand. If you forget to do this and someone catches you, you're immediately obligated to play one of your remaining cards and then draw enough cards from the deck to make four.
oh ok thank you@@ThreePointOneFou
If I had the choice, I would choose the 1980s rules!
Why would you want to play the 99 card though? Is it there for if you have no other cards in your hand you have no choice but to play it?
Why does it just have an auto-lose card?
So...what happens if you keep forgetting to draw and end up with 0 cards in hand; especially if you intentionally do it. I feel like not being able to play a card would be a boon in this game.
WHAT in normal ONO 99 it is not legal to go under 0
Nice
i love how ono99 card is just " i dont wanna play this game so imma just play this card thats very useless "
But... what if the first number out is 99?
UNO DOS TRES SKIP-BO PHASE 10 AND ONO 99
OOOOOOOONOOOOOOO Halp meh oh mah gawd
(Said in Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure voice)
why no 99+ card :(
"What happen if we crate a card that makes you lose instantly?"
But the exchange if forget to draw will never forget about draw
So the chips are like lives in a video game
heres how to learn math and play a card game at the same time
Is this also in the amalgam
The first UNO how-to-play video of 2024.
Oh, no! Drawing an ONO 99 card gets you eliminated from the game!
ONO 99 is UNO's version of 99.
I mean even
This is similar to 5 Alive
жду объяснений правил игры уно амальгама день 1376
Yay
The hold card is essentially a zero.
ONO 99 implied tha there is OYES 99
i'm purple now.
the "Hold" is a 0
ONO 99 card dosent play
Its just same as 5 alive
I was expecting that when u get a 99, u are getting 99 cards 💀
i have ono 99 lol i already knew how to play and buddy the hold or double play card dosen't exist in it bruh?
double play does exist its just play two
@@TmONEYfan not in my verison lol
I feel like this is a dream and this is a joke, why do I feel this feeling :/
Why would anybody play an Ono 99 card?
Oh no.
...99!
If remember 99 card game then this look familiar to you
oh no
ONO is more of Oh No it's math than UNO
1 Hour gang 👇👇👇
should've been called "noventa y nueve"
So like hot potato with cards
More card games need a "you lose lol" card
oh no
oh no.
Oh no 99 is the only game that doesn’t have Uno in the title
Skipbo?
by the thumbnail i can already see this will be hard to understand
Oh no 99 😂
OH NO 99
Well now no one will say "ono!"
O-No
Evem
This is Sorry! Revenge but 99 instead of 21
OH NO 99
(clearly not a baldi reference)