Bowling Solitaire Complete v1 01
Bowling Solitaire Complete v1 01
Bowling Solitaire Complete v1 01
The Components
All the game needs to play is two suits from a regular deck of cards and only the
cards 1 through 10. The Ace counts as a 1 naturally. That's it except for some
paper to score on.
Set-up
The set-up allows the game to play differently with each frame and indeed the
set-up will be required to create each new frame too.
The 20 cards are shuffled and 10 of them are placed face-up to form the 10-Pin
formation. It doesn't matter where you build them from but it is probably easier
to place them from back to front to create the rows of 4, 3, 2 and 1. The cards
should be spaced as seen below to create the classic formation used in 10-Pin
Bowling.
X X X X
X X X
X X
X
The final 10 cards are then used to create three piles of cards, known as the
'Ball Piles'.
The leftmost pile should contain 5 cards, the central pile 3 cards and the
rightmost pile 2 cards.
In the first frame, the player downed eight pins with the first ball and the
remaining two with the second ball. The spare is noted in the corner of the first
frame. NO SCORE IS ENTERED YET.
In the second frame, the player downed all ten pins with the first ball (a
strike). These 10 are added to the 10 already earned in the first frame, and 20
points are now entered for the first frame. The strike is recorded in the corner
of the second frame.
In the third frame, the player again bowls a strike. The strike is entered in the
corner of the third frame but still no score is entered for the second or third
frames.
In the fourth frame, the player downs six pins with the first ball. Now that we
are two balls after the second frame’s strike, the second frame score can be
recorded. Ten pins were downed in that frame, ten were downed by the first
succeeding ball, and six were downed by the second succeeding ball, making a
total of 26 pins scored in the second frame. These are added to the 20 from the
first frame to obtain a running total of 46 pins.
With the second ball in the fourth frame, the player downs three pins. The score
for the third frame is 10+6+3, for a total of 19 pins. These are added to the 46
pins to obtain a running total of 65 pins.
The score for the fourth frame is 9 (6+3). These pins are added to the 65 to
obtain a running total of 74 pins.
If a player makes a spare or a strike in the tenth frame, the player must throw
one or two more balls to determine their scoring bonus!
Bowling Solitaire was created by Sid Sackson and published as part of A Gamut of Games (1969), a book of games rules
that can be played with commonly found game pieces like a deck of cards, checkers set, and more. A Gamut of Games
has rules for 38 games, created by Sackson and various designers, edited by Sackson. Bowling Solitaire was published as
real game (not just rules) with comical cartoon bowling pin cards as a two-games-in-one game set, Elevenses for One and
Bowling Solitaire (2016) by Eagle-Gryphon.
Neil Thomson reviewed and explained the Bowling Solitaire rules on Board Game Geek. I used his reviewed as the
games nearly unchanged. The review:
https://boardgamegeek.com/thread/1163813/sid-sacksons-bowling-solitaire-detailed-reiew
Scoring rules and scoring illustration courtesy of the official rulebook from the
Elevenses for One and Bowling Solitaire (2016) by Eagle-Gryphon--Rulebook-11ses41-SolitaireBowling_revised-low.pdf.
v1.0 release
v1.01 minor reorganization
Bowling Solitaire score sheet by boardgamegeek.com user msaya
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