Bridge
Bridge is a four-player partnership card game where you and a partner bid for and try to win tricks. It rewards memory, planning, and teamwork, and a single deck of cards is all you need to start a lifetime of play.
What you need to start
- A standard 52-card deck of playing cards
- A partner and two opponents (four players in two teams)
- A flat table and four comfortable chairs
- A pencil and pad, or a simple scoring app, to keep score
At a glance
Your learning path
Three stages, taken at your own pace. Start at the top, get comfortable, then move down as you grow. There is no rush, and no wrong place to begin.
Start here. These four lessons walk you through the whole game, one piece at a time: how bridge works, how the bidding conversation flows, how to win tricks with trumps, and how the scoring adds up.
How To Play Bridge (Complete Tutorial)
Gather Together GamesLearn To Play Bridge - Part 2 - Understanding Bidding
Peter HollandsHow to Play The Card Game Bridge | Tutorial 3 | Play Tricks
ACBL - American Contract Bridge LeagueHow Bridge Scoring Works
Peter HollandsOnce you can play a hand, these five lessons build real skill: opening bids and responses, the popular Stayman and transfer conventions, making a plan as declarer, defending with smart opening leads, and the all-important finesse.
Beginner Bridge - Chapter 2 - Opening the Bidding and Responding
Essex Bridge Center: Online Bridge AcademyLearn to Play Bridge: Lesson 7: Stayman
Oasis Bridge TuitionJoan Butts Bridge - Winners, Losers & The Plan
Joan Butts BridgeDefense 1 Bridge Defense Explained: Planning the Defense from Partner's Opening Lead
Bridge with BenBridge Lessons The Finesse - Part 1
ACBL - American Contract Bridge LeagueReady to play your best? These five lessons cover advanced conventions, sharper hand evaluation, how duplicate bridge works at clubs and online, expert declarer technique, and the defensive signals that win partnerships their close hands.
Gerber
Bridge Lessons Tony StawHow To Evaluate A Bridge Hand
Peter HollandsDuplicate Bridge Scoring Explained!
Bridge Lessons Tony StawBridge Lesson | Masterclass #2 | Squeeze Plays
Bridge Base OnlineChoosing between Attitude, Count, & Suit Preference Signals - with Curt Soloff
Learn Bridge OnlineWhy bridge is wonderful after 50
Bridge is one of the best games you can take up after 50. Every hand asks you to remember cards, count points, and plan ahead, which keeps your mind sharp and engaged. It is also deeply social: you always play with a partner and against two opponents, so there is constant friendly conversation and connection. Because skill matters more than speed or strength, bridge is a true lifelong game you can keep enjoying for decades, often improving well into your eighties and beyond. And you are never short of a game, because you can play in person at a local club or online from home at Bridge Base Online any hour of the day. It is challenge, friendship, and fun all in one deck of cards.
Your first month, week by week
Learn the goal of the game, how a deck is dealt into four hands, and how tricks are won. Play a few practice hands with no bidding, just turning cards, to get the feel of following suit and using trumps.
Start counting high-card points (Ace 4, King 3, Queen 2, Jack 1) and learn opening bids and simple responses. Practice opening 1 of a suit or 1 no-trump.
Add the basics of declarer play: when dummy comes down, make a plan and count your winners or losers before you play a card.
Try your first defense. Learn a sensible opening lead, then visit a local club's newcomer game or join a beginner table on Bridge Base Online.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Forgetting to count your points before bidding; always add your high-card points first, then decide what to bid.
- Playing your first card before you have a plan; pause when dummy appears and count your winners or losers.
- Drawing trumps too early or too late; decide whether you need your trumps for ruffing before you pull them.
- Leading the wrong card on defense; against a suit contract, a safe top-of-a-sequence lead is usually better than leading away from an Ace.
- Ignoring your partner's signals; watch the cards they play, because high-then-low often means they like the suit.
- Bidding to game without the strength for it; a partnership usually needs about 25 to 26 combined points to bid game.
Make it easier on your body
Simple ways to keep bridge comfortable and safe with arthritis, low vision, or limited mobility.
- Play from the comfort of home at Bridge Base Online so you never have to travel or stand at a club.
- Use large-print or jumbo-index playing cards so the suits and numbers are easy to read at a glance.
- 関節炎のある手でカードのファンをしっかりと握る必要がないように、カード ホルダーまたはラックをテーブルの上に置いてください。 |||9月||| 自動カード シャッフル機能を追加すると、指や手首に負担をかけずにハンドを配ったりリセットしたりできます。 |||9月||| 視界が限られている場合でも、適切なタスク照明を設定し、拡大鏡を近くに置いて、すべてのカードがはっきり見えるようにしてください。 |||9月||| ブリッジのセッションは数時間かかる場合があるため、快適でしっかりサポートされた椅子を選択し、短い休憩を取りましょう。 |||9月||| 聞こえてくる言葉 |||9月||| トリック |||9月||| 各プレイヤーから 1 枚ずつ、4 枚のカードで構成される 1 ラウンド。リードされたスートの最高のカード (または最高の切り札) が勝ちとなります。 |||9月||| トランプ |||9月||| 入札中に他のすべてのスーツを上回る選択されたスーツ。切り札は、切り札以外のカードよりもトリックに勝ちます。 |||9月||| 入札 |||9月||| オークション中に作成された、自分の側がどのような切り札のスーツで勝利を試みるトリックの数に関する声明。 |||9月||| ダミー |||9月||| 宣言者のパートナー。そのカードはテーブルに表向きに置かれ、宣言者によってプレイされます。 |||9月||| フィネス |||9月||| 低いカードを対戦相手の後にプレイし、欠けている高いカードが有利に配置されることを期待して、低いカードでトリックを獲得する方法。 |||9月||| 契約書 |||9月||| 宣言側が何トリック勝たなければならないか、またどの切り札スーツまたはノートランプで勝たなければならないかを設定する最終的な入札。 |||9月||| 仲間を見つける場所 |||9月||| 地元のブリッジ クラブでは、初心者や監督されたゲームが初心者を歓迎し、パートナー探しをお手伝いします。 |||9月||| シニア センターと退職者コミュニティでは、毎週ソーシャル ブリッジの午後が開催されることがよくあります。 |||9月||| American Contract Bridge League (ACBL) には、北米全土のクラブ、レッスン、イベントがリストされています。 |||9月||| Bridge Base Online は、一日中いつでもプレイ、練習、他のプレイヤーと出会うことができる無料のサイトです。 |||9月||| 地元の図書館やコミュニティ センターでは、初心者向けのブリッジ クラスを無料または低料金で頻繁に開催しています。 |||9月||| ブリッジの学習を開始する |||9月||| 無料のフレンドリーなレッスンに登録して、最初の一歩を踏み出すお手伝いをします。どこから出発するかをお知らせください。そこでお会いいたします。
- Add an automatic card shuffler so you can deal and reset hands without strain on your fingers or wrists.
- Set up good task lighting and keep a magnifier nearby to make every card clear if your vision is limited.
- Choose a comfortable, well-supported chair and take short breaks, since a session of bridge can run a couple of hours.
Words you'll hear
- Trick
- One round of four cards, one from each player; the highest card of the led suit (or highest trump) wins it.
- Trump
- The suit chosen during bidding that beats all other suits; any trump card wins a trick over non-trump cards.
- Bid
- A statement of how many tricks your side will try to win and in which trump suit, made during the auction.
- Dummy
- The declarer's partner, whose cards are laid face up on the table and played by the declarer.
- Finesse
- A way to win a trick with a lower card by playing it after an opponent, hoping a missing high card sits favorably.
- Contract
- The final bid that sets how many tricks the declaring side must win, and in which trump suit or no-trump.
Where to find your people
- Local bridge clubs, where newcomer and supervised games welcome beginners and help you find a partner.
- Senior centers and retirement communities, which often host weekly social bridge afternoons.
- The American Contract Bridge League (ACBL), which lists clubs, lessons, and events across North America.
- Bridge Base Online, a free site where you can play, practice, and meet other players any time of day.
- Your local library or community center, which frequently offers free or low-cost beginner bridge classes.
Start learning Bridge
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