Quodlibet (Latin: "what you like") is a traditional card game and drinking game associated with central European student fraternities that is played with William Tell pattern cards and in which the dealer is known as the 'beer king'.[1][2] It is a compendium, trick-taking game for 4 players using a 32-card pack of German-suited playing cards.[1] The Bavarian game of Rumpel is descended from Quodlibet.[3]
Quodlibet is an old German student drinking game mentioned as early as 1845 as one of the "best-known drinking games".[4] It is described in at least two 1862 sources as comprising around 20 different deals (Touren) each, in itself, almost childish, but collectively making for an enjoyable variety. These deals included "the well known game of Black Peter, originally a Quodlibet contract, as well as Sequence."[5]
Quodlibet was particularly popular in German student circles and is still played by student fraternities in Austria. In a 400th anniversary magazine for the University of Tübingen that year, students from Mainz describe the rules for Quodlibet.[3] In 1878 a Nuremberg choir song features a pub in which four play Sans Prendre into the night while a quintet plays Schaffkopf or Quodlibet.[6] The well known children's game, Schwarzer Peter (or Old Maid in Britain), was originally a Quodlibet deal.[7]
Quolibet is a four-hander played with a pack of 32 German-suited cards that is popular with students.[8] In Austria, these are the traditional double-ended William Tell cards.
The rules given here are based on those used by two student fraternities from the Austrian region: KÖStV Frankonia Wien from Vienna, founded in 1919, and KÖStV Badenia from Baden bei Wien in Lower Austria, founded in 1928, both of which are members of the Mittelschüler-Kartellverband, the umbrella organisation for all such high school fraternities in Austria.[9][10]
A partie in Quodlibet consists of 12 games which, in some circles are divided into three 'wheels' (Rädern) or rounds, each of four deals (Touren).[11] Quodlibet is played anti-clockwise[2] and is a trick-taking game in which players must follow suit (Farbzwang), but there is no trump suit or requirement to win the trick.[1]
The aim is to score as few penalty points as possible.[2]
The dealer in Quodlibet is called the 'beer king' (Bierkönig). The first beer king deals 8 cards to each player (normally 3-3-2 or 3-2-3), picks up his hand, chooses a contract from the first round (see below) and leads to the first trick.[1] When the first deal has been played out, the player to the dealer's right becomes the next beer king; he may now select one of the three remaining contracts and so on.
At the end of each round, the player with the most penalty points becomes the new beer king and may select the first contract. The player with the fewest penalty points at the end of the partie is the winner.[2]
The first round (das erste Rad) has the following contracts:
The contracts in the second round (das zweite Rad) are:
In the third round (das dritte Rad) or Wheel of Fortune (Glücksrad) the beer king must announce his or her chosen contract before dealing.[citation needed]
Quodlibet is played in many variations that deviate in their details from the above description. The 1888 Meyers Konversationslexikon describes Quodlibet as "a card game that consists of 13 [sic] different deals that is especially popular in student circles".[13]