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New Playing Cards 'Six Generations' Are Invented Unexpectedly

   Ted Soloview, inventor and publisher of new playing cards "Six Generations," from Anchorage, Alaska. (PRNewsFoto)

ANCHORAGE, AK USA
    ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Sept. 22 /PRNewswire/ -- The monarchic structure of
standard playing cards with King, Queen and Jack is now breaking apart by an
Alaskan game designer who invented a new "democratic" deck with a 64-person
family in six generations.
    (Photo:  NewsCom:  http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050922/SFTH002 )
    When Ted Soloview, a graphic designer from Alaska was searching his
genealogy with the roots of Russian, German, and Ukrainian ancestors, he
caught an idea that anybody's triangle-looking family tree could be used to
create a new card game.
    After a year of research and choosing a universal match for parents and
children, husbands and wives, lifestyle and clothing, names and countries for
the European family of immigrants to America, his idea has generated an
innovative card game, "Six Generations."
    "The amount of our ancestors is doubled in each older generation," Ted
Soloview said. "We have two parents, four grandparents, eight
great-grandparents, and so on. In six generations we get 62 ancestors. It's a
perfect amount for cards in a deck, since we need to shuffle them easily.
That's how I stopped at number six."
    Ted Soloview did not think twice to name an immigrant from
Austria -- "Arnold."  A man from England was "Charles," from
Germany -- "Karl." All first names were taken from the bureau of vital
statistics to display the most popular from the times they were from.
Generation #1 in the game consists of the siblings Emily and Jacob -- their
names keep the record popularity for newborns in the U.S. since 1996."
    The surprise came later, when this solitaire-type card game was already
printed by Carta Mundi, a U.S. game manufacturer, in September 2004. After
making the first sales, Ted has realized that this genealogical deck was not
just a single game "Six Generations," but a modern-looking pack of
"democratic" playing cards.
    "My customers asked me the quick explanation of this game. I told them,
it's like playing cards. But instead of three characters of King, Queen and
Jack, in my deck each card is a costumed member from a non-monarchic family.
Here we match husband and wife, children and parents, but not the boring
numbers anymore. It's not a fight between four suits; it's matchmaking and
creation of the family."
    Some other card games, like "21," were easily adopted with new playing
cards. But to play poker, Ted Soloview wrote new rules, calling the game
"Genpoker." The website he designed, http://www.sixgenerations.com , has the
new rules and details.
    "Six Generations" is opening the door for other game inventors to create
dozens new card games, or converting the old ones. It might take some time
before Las Vegas will accept this new deck to play poker in their casinos, but
the time could come.
    Amazon.com is the major reseller of Six Generations card game in the U.S.
The price is $8.97.

     Six Generations Publishing
     Ted Soloview
     907-563-9999, FAX 907-522-9433
     soloview@gci.net
     Website:  http://www.sixgenerations.com


SOURCE Six Generations Publishing




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Related links:
  • http://www.sixgenerations.com
    Photo Notes:
    NewsCom: 
    http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050922/SFTH002
    AP Archive: http://photoarchive.ap.org
    PRN Photo Desk, photodesk@prnewswire.com
    CONTACT:
    Ted Soloview of Six Generations Publishing,
    +1-907-563-9999, or fax, +1-907-522-9433, or soloview@gci.net