'' in 1900.
Uta-garuta is a card game in which 100
waka poems are written on two sets of 100 cards: one set is , which have the complete poem taken from the , and the other is , which each correspond to a
yomifuda and have only the last few lines of the corresponding poem on them. One person is chosen to be the reader. As the reader reads a
yomifuda, the players race to find its associated
torifuda before anybody else does. This game has traditionally been played on New Year's Day since 1904.
Competitive karuta has competitions on various levels with the Japan national championship tournament being held every January at
Omi shrine (a
Shinto shrine) in
Ōtsu, Shiga since 1955. A few non-
matching games exist that use only the
yomifuda. , is a simple game of chance originating from the
Meiji period. (Color Crowns) is a 4-player partnership game that is related to
Goita. In both games, the poems are irrelevant, and the only parts of the cards that matter are the appearance of the poets such as their clothing, sex, or social status.
Ita-karuta is a variation found in
Hokkaido. The
torifuda are made of wood while the
yomifuda remain the same or lack illustrations of the poets. They are used to play a competitive partnership game called '''' in which the last half of the poem is read.
Iroha karuta is an easier-to-understand matching game for children, similar to Uta-garuta but with 96 cards. Instead of poems, the cards represent the 47
syllables of the
hiragana syllabary and adds for the 48th (since the syllable
-n can never start any word or phrase). It uses the old
iroha ordering for the syllables which includes two obsolete syllables,
wi () and
we (). A typical
torifuda features a drawing with a
kana at one corner of the card. Its corresponding
yomifuda features a
proverb connected to the picture with the first syllable being the
kana displayed on the
torifuda. There are 3 standard Iroha karuta variants:
Kamigata,
Edo and
Owari. Each variant has its own set of proverbs based on the local dialect and culture. The Kamigata or
Kyoto version is the oldest but the Edo version is the most widespread, being found all over Japan. The Owari variant existed only during the latter half of the 19th-century before being supplanted by the Edo version.
Obake karuta Obake karuta is an obsolete variation of
Iroha karuta unique to Tokyo. The cards were created in the
Edo period and remained popular through the 1910s or 1920s. Each card in the deck features a hiragana syllable and a creature from
Japanese mythology; in fact,
obake karuta means "ghost cards" or "monster cards." Success requires knowledge of Japanese mythology and folklore as players attempt to collect cards that match clues read by a referee. The player who accumulates the most cards by the end of the game wins.
Obake karuta is an early example of the common Japanese fascination with classifying monsters and creating new ones. The game is one of the earliest attempts by Japanese companies to categorize legendary creatures, label them, define them, and subsequently market them. As such, it is a precursor to the
Godzilla films of the 1950s and later. Even more closely,
obake karuta resembles the
Yu-Gi-Oh! or
Pokémon Trading Card Game, which also involves
collecting cards that represent fabulous creatures. In fact, many Pokémon were designed specifically after creatures from Japanese mythology. ==See also==