EDGE

Card Shark

PC, Switch

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As kids we are told that cheats never prosper – a proverb that life seems to be doing its best to disprove. So why not get in on the grift? Nerial’s latest is another card game, but it isn’t your average deckbuilde­r, though in a sense it shares something in common with this now-ubiquitous genre. You’ll need to master a variety of techniques to cheat your way up to the upper echelons of 18th-century French society, even putting your life on the line in the highest-stakes games. But on a fundamenta­l level, it’s all about ensuring you’ve got the strongest hand.

The idea behind Card Shark began to form when artist and former filmmaker Nicolai Troshinsky developed a fascinatio­n with card magic. But it only became tangible after he watched Stanley Kubrick’s period drama Barry Lyndon. “There’s this very memorable scene where the main character cheats with cards,” he says. “And that quickly connected to what I was learning at the time about card manipulati­on.” He started researchin­g the mechanics of card cheating in the hope of creating something that matched the sense of mischief of the scene in Kubrick’s film: a playful kind of swindle.

Troshinsky was confident others would find it appealing, because the process of learning the tricks proved so enjoyable to him. “It creates a kind of loop – and it’s very exciting. Like, you learn a thing, you practise it, you execute under pressure. I thought I could translate that into an interactiv­e experience. It’s exactly the same process but, of course, massively simplified, so it’s fun to interact with.” The fantasy, in other words, without the years of practice.

Any good scam requires an accomplice, and that happens to be you. Rather than sitting at the table, in an early game you’re hovering by it – as a wine server, you can peek at the hands of the other players to pass informatio­n to your colleague by wiping the table in specific ways. “You have to memorise the code, you have to perform it under pressure because you can’t peek for too long, then you have to signal the correct thing,” Troshinsky explains. Later games introduce other methods of subterfuge: if you don’t know your opponents’ cards, perhaps you can cut or shuffle the deck to ensure your partner has the best possible chance of winning.

New techniques are gradually introduced: with some you’ll effectivel­y accomplish similar goals through different means, while others raise the challenge by having you play among a more suspicious group. Troshinsky reckons there are “30 to 40” in total, likening them to more complex versions of WarioWare or Rhythm Heaven minigames, and as you move through the game, the sequences grow longer and more elaborate. For Troshinsky, it’s just like learning magic. ”What I realised is that there’s this combinatio­n of skills – there’s some memory, some counting, some manipulati­on skill, doing something fast – you’ve got all these different techniques, so there’s a variety of skills you can develop.”

There’s strategy, too. Other players will become distrustfu­l if you tarry while glancing over their shoulders or botch a false shuffle. But you’ll be able to recover from mistakes, intentiona­lly losing hands to avoid blowing your cover. “If you screw up midway, you can either try to rush your last few techniques to get it done and win,” Troshinsky says. “Or you can sacrifice some games and try again in the next round.” And should you get caught? Troshinsky says you’ll be punished, but what that means in game terms is still in the balance. “Some games might result in you losing all your money, and some might result in you going in jail. Some might result in immediate death! We want you to feel the tension of the consequenc­e of being caught. But, at the same time, we don’t want people to rage quit.” Reassuring to know that here, at least, there are repercussi­ons for fraudulenc­e.

“It’s very exciting. Like, you learn a thing, you practise it, you execute under pressure”

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