I've played many person games of Uno.
I know/knew the rules like this:
"Skips you, goes back to me"
"Reverse, goes back to me"
"Draw 2, goes back to me"
"Draw 4, goes back to me"
If it's a Draw 4 Wild, I get to call the color & lay down a card of that color (great if you go out & win like that).
If it's a regular Wild, the opponent can go.
I never heard your stacking D2 before.
Personally, I thought all "action" cards (except regular Wild), prevents the next person from doing anything, therefore the "___, goes back to me" I said above.
Yes, in two player Uno, that's how it goes in a 2 player game (which I prefer). The dynamic *really* changes with more players though, and that's what this video addresses.
Incidentally, I have always played the draw 4 as a wild, in that it doesn't come back to me.
@@LegendaryTactics I thought in the rules, you can lay the same card or color as on the top of the stack...EXCEPT the person receiving the "action cards" weren't allowed to go. To me, that has the potential of hurting the person who initially played it.
& we all know people play the Draw ___ cards to increase the # in your hand...usually when you have a small amount left.
I take it you saw the Tweet from the UNO account as well :)
@@jamestriplett5854yea it is,as it is a house rule it was first introduced in UNO no mercy
can you stack 4 and 2?
I like the house rule actually, because it feels like there is a risk of playing +2
That's an interesting point - although in a 3 or more player game, there isn't a lot of risk unless the +2s go full circle