In
playing cards, pips are small symbols on the front side of the cards that determine the
suit of the card and its rank. For example, a
standard 52-card deck consists of four suits of thirteen cards each: spades, hearts, clubs, and diamonds. Each suit contains three
face cards – the jack, queen, and king. The remaining ten cards are called pip cards and are numbered from one to ten. (The "one" is almost always changed to "
ace" and often is the highest card in many games, followed by the face cards.) Each pip card consists of an encoding in the top left-hand corner (and, because the card is also inverted upon itself, the lower right-hand corner) which tells the card-holder the value of the card. In Europe, it is more common to have corner indices on all four corners which lets left-handed players fan their cards more comfortably. The center of the card contains pips representing the suit. The number of pips corresponds with the number of the card, and the arrangement of the pips is generally the same from deck to deck. Pip cards (originally 'peep') are also known as numerals or
numeral cards, number cards, spot cards, or spotters. In
point-trick games where cards often score their value in pips (or equivalent if they are court cards e.g. a King may be worth 13),
card points are sometimes referred to as pips. Many
French-suited packs derived from the
English pattern contain a variation on the pip style for the
Ace of spades, often consisting of an especially large pip or even a representative image, along with information about the deck's manufacturer, originally to display the
stamp duty. This is also the case for the
Ace of clubs in the
Paris pattern and the
Ace of diamonds in the
Russian pattern. In Germany, the
Ace of Hearts was used, or for
German-suited playing cards, the
deuce of hearts was used for this purpose. For
Latin-suited playing cards, the ace of coins was used. Historically German pips are generally different from the pips used in France and England, and the latter dates from at least the fourteenth century CE. ==Dice==