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Strip game
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== Notable games == === Euchre === Strip [[euchre]] developed in the late 1800s from a [[euchre variant]] known as 'progressive euchre'.<ref>{{cite newspaper | date = March 22, 1886 | location = Evansville, Indiana | newspaper = The Evansville Journal | title = Strip Euchre | url = https://newspapers.com/article/the-evansville-journal-strip-euchre/167646667 | via = [[newspapers.com]] }}</ref> === Mahjong === A game of strip [[mahjong]] is depicted in the allegorical painting ''[[Beijing 2008 (painting)|北京2008]]''. Many {{nihongo | strip mahjong | {{ruby-ja | 脱衣麻雀 | だついマージャン }} | datsui mājan }} video games{{which|date=February 2022}} have been published, especially by Japanese software companies.<ref>{{cite web | url = https://sutorippu.com/tag/mahjongg | title = Mahjongg | Sutorippu! | date = 5 May 2023 }}</ref> === Murchéh daréh === "Murcheh dareh che kar konam?" ("There are ants [here], what shall I do?"),<ref>{{cite journal|journal=Research Journal of Literary Schools|volume=8|issue=28|date=January 2025|pages=52-80|title=A Poetic Analysis of Persian Pop Songs|first1=Hamzeh|last1=Sharbati|first2=Ghodsieh|last2=Rezvanian|doi=10.22080/rjls.2024.26475.1452}}</ref> or just "Murcheh dareh" (مورچه داره, There Are Ants),<ref>{{cite journal|journal=Journal of Middle East Women's Studies|last=Jabbari|first=A.|date=2024|title=Race against Time|volume=20|issue=3|page=270–288|doi=10.1215/15525864-11412039}}</ref> is a traditional Iranian dance-based game<ref>Anjavi Shirazi [1973, 55-56]</ref> played by women, although a parody played by men exists ("Zar gazidam"){{citation needed|date=February 2022}}. === Poker === '''Strip poker''' is a [[party game]] and a variation of the traditional [[poker]] where players remove clothing when they lose a round. Any form of poker can be adapted to a strip form; however, it is usually played with simple variants with few betting rounds, like [[five-card draw]].<ref>[http://poker.about.com/od/strippoker/a/strippoker.htm About.com: How to Play Strip Poker] {{webarchive | url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170224135327/poker.about.com/od/strippoker/a/strippoker.htm | date = 2017-02-24 }} by Toby Bochan</ref> Strip poker can be played by single-sex groups or by mixed groups in social situations and intended to generate an atmosphere of fun and to lighten the social atmosphere by the removal of clothing. While the game is sometimes employed as a type of [[foreplay]], it is itself usually not considered a sexual interaction due to the fact that it does not require contact and full nudity is involved only at the end of the game or sometimes not at all (depending on rule variants). The game is sometimes integrated with [[Truth or Dare?]] rules. Strip poker has been adapted for solo gameplay, such as by use of online or offline video games. ==== Rules ==== At the beginning of each turn, each player must remove an article of clothing as an ante. If there are two couples playing there should be four shoes in the pot before the cards are dealt. At the outset, one of the articles of clothing is removed from the game permanently. So the winner will receive three articles of clothing in the ante. The opener must bet, and they can be raised, just like ordinary poker. After the draw, the players make another bet, like regular poker. Once an article of clothing is removed, it cannot be put back on. The clothing is just used as a stake for betting. Only clothing can be bet. No player may withdraw once the game begins without forfeiting all articles of clothing.<ref>{{cite book | last = Silberstang | first = Edwin | title = Silberstang's Encyclopedia of Games & Gambling | publisher = Cardoza Publishing | year = 1996 | isbn = 0-940685-55-8 | location = Cooper Station, New York, NY | pages = [https://archive.org/details/silberstangsency00silb/page/89 89, 90] | url = https://archive.org/details/silberstangsency00silb/page/89 }}</ref> ==== Strategy ==== In some rule sets, players who fold before the flop are not required to remove clothing. As such, a player who is uncomfortable removing clothing (or, more commonly, a player who does not want to remove all their clothing first) can simply fold very often or every time before the flop, essentially playing a "tight" [[Texas hold 'em pre-flop basic strategy|pre-flop strategy]]. Using this strategy, a player could stay clothed for the entire game simply by folding their hands. Strip poker requires a different overall strategy from poker played with betting chips since the maximum loss on a hand of strip poker is (typically) one item of clothing. In a betting environment, a player who stays in the pot with a weak hand is liable to lose many chips in a single hand. In strip poker, the risk of staying in a hand is significantly limited, so players can play hands with lower probabilities than they would in a [[cash game]]. For example, in a cash game, because it occurs only 8% of the time, an [[Draw (poker)#Inside straight draw|inside straight draw]] might be a poor hand to play, hence the saying "Never draw to an inside straight." In strip poker, when the potential loss is only one item of clothing whether you fold or call, an 8% chance to win the hand is better than the alternative. Another variant uses some sort of betting token, allowing for normal poker strategies. Once a player runs out of tokens, they can "sell" a piece of clothing for more tokens in order to stay in the game. ==== History ==== While it has been suggested that strip poker originated in [[New Orleans]] brothels in the United States around the same time as original poker in the 19th century,<ref>{{cite web | url = http://777.com/articles/strip-poker-history-and-rules | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080514110750/777.com/articles/strip-poker-history-and-rules | url-status = dead | title = Who Will Lose Their Undies Tonight? Strip Poker - History and Rules | archive-date = 14 May 2008 | website = 777.com }}</ref> the term is only attested since the 20th century.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://etymonline.com/index.php?term=strip | title = Online Etymological Dictionary | access-date = 2011-10-12 | archive-date = 2022-11-01 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20221101040949/etymonline.com/word/strip | url-status = live }}</ref> Strip poker most likely began as a prank or [[hazing]] among college-age boys, and as late as the 1930s, the current mixed-gender version was called "mixed strip poker" in England to differentiate it from the all-male variety.<ref>See Chapter 1 of [[A Coffin for Dimitrios]] by [[Eric Ambler]]</ref> === Yakyūken === {{further|Yakyūken}} Popularised by [[Kinichi Hagimoto]]<ref>{{cite thesis | url = https://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/1602 | title = Laughing Until It Hurts: Children, Mothers and Concerns about Comedic Television in Contemporary Japan | publisher = The University of Chicago | last1 = Feeney | first1 = William John }}</ref> (although he later expressed regret) and inspired by contemporary [[baseball in Japan|Japanese baseball]] pep routines — Yakyūken (野球拳) means 'baseball fist' — strip games became a popular fixture of comedy and game shows in the mid-20th century initially in the form of yakyūken, in which several rounds of jyan-ken-pon ([[rock-paper-scissors]]) are played and televised, with the loser removing a layer of clothing.
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