8 of clubs, 3 of diamonds, the ace of spades and the king of hearts

Chappinge: I have no idea where this game originates but I learnt to play it at Tollerton.

Each player is dealt 5 or 7 cards and the remainder of the pack is placed face down in the centre with the top card turned face up beside it. The player on the dealer's left leads by discarding any card of the same suit as the face-up card, or changing the suit with a card of the same value or changing to any suit with any ace.
An 8 played makes the next player miss a go; a jack reverses the order of play. 2s and 3s have special value: played they force the next player to pick up two or three from the pack, unless he can discard a 2 or a 3 in turn. If several are played consecutively, the value accumulates and the first player unable to place a 2 or 3 in turn must then pick up the accumulated total of cards from the face-down pack!
On playing the penultimate card in your hand, you must call "Chappinge" – if you don't before the next player discards, you have to pick up a card from the face-down pack.
The aim of the game is to get rid of all your cards.
However if you're playing a number of games, the other players are scored on their remaining cards: court cards score 10; jacks and 8s score 15, aces, 2s and 3s score 20. All other cards score at face value. The winner is the player with the lowest score at the end of this game, or as many games as you choose to set.