Get in the Game

Brailled Cards
Pictured: Two tactile playing cards.  These two standard playing cards have braille labels imprinted on them – the Queen of Spades and the three of Hearts are shown.

Card games are fun for everyone. Well, maybe not “52 Pickup,” but every other card game I can think of, and there are so many!  Blind and visually impaired people can and do share in the fun. We play with a marked deck!

It is true. The cards are marked!

Any deck of cards can be adapted.  Making playing cards tactile is the way. Just add braille! A few raised dots, inconspicuous to sighted players and likely unreadable also, tell the visually challenged player exactly what cards are in hand.

Add braille to the upper left-hand corner and the bottom right-hand corner (opposite corners). Each card is brailled with the corresponding number or J, Q, and K for jack, queen, and king. In addition, the cards are marked with the corresponding suit. So the 3 of hearts is marked with the brailled 3 and brailled H for hearts. The 4 of spades is marked with the braille for 4S, the 9 of diamonds will be 9D. The only exception is the number 10. Because the number 10 requires 3 digits including the symbol for the suit, and all other cards have only 2, that might be an attention-getter. So, the 10 is labeled with a brailled X instead.

If you are blind or visually impaired, it is fairly easy to learn just the braille that is used on playing cards if you do not already know braille. There are only a total of 17 different braille symbols to a standard deck of cards and all 52 cards are uniquely identified with combinations of just those symbols.

A slate and stylus is all that is needed to turn an ordinary deck of cards into a tactile deck. Or you can  spend a few dollars and buy a brailled deck of cards. Your choice.

There are 17 braille symbols used to mark a deck of playing cards, making the entire deck tactile and accessible.
Pictured: Chart shows the 17 braille symbols used on tactile playing cards. Symbols include numbers 1 through 9, a special braille character for number 10, the four card suits, and the J, Q, and K for the picture cards.

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