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Hearts vs Spades

Hearts and Spades are both classic trick-taking card games played with a single 52-card deck. They share basically nothing else. Hearts is an avoid-the-points game; Spades is partnership-bidding. Here's how they actually differ.

Variant A
Hearts

Open the Hearts scorecard

Variant B
Spades

Open the Spades scorecard

Side by side

AxisHeartsSpades
Players4 (usually)4 (partnerships of 2)
TeamsIndividual — everyone for themselvesPartnership — teams of 2
GoalAVOID points — lowest score winsHIT your bid — highest score wins
How rounds workPlay out all 13 tricks, count pointsBid first, then play to hit it
Trump suitNoneSpades always
Point cardsHearts = 1 each, Queen of Spades = 13No point cards — points from bids
Special moveShoot the moon (take all hearts + Q♠)Nil bid (claim zero tricks)
Target scoreGame ends when someone hits 100First team to 500

Which should you play?

Hearts

Pick Hearts if you're playing solo (no partner), you want a quick 30-minute game, or you enjoy the strategic dance of dumping point cards on opponents. The shoot-the-moon possibility makes every hand tense.

Spades

Pick Spades if you have a partner and like teamwork. The bidding phase is its own minigame, and Nil bids create huge swings. Spades is the heavier of the two — typically 45-60 minutes vs Hearts' 20-30.

Common questions

Can I play Spades without a partner?+

There are 3-player and solo Spades variants, but they lose the central appeal: partnership bidding. If you can't find a 4th, Hearts works better as a 4-player solo game.

Which one is easier to learn?+

Hearts is simpler structurally — just avoid hearts and the Q♠. Spades requires understanding bidding strategy, sandbag penalties, and partner coordination. Hearts is the better intro to trick-taking.

Do they share strategy concepts?+

Both reward counting cards (who has the high spades / who has the queen?) and reading what opponents threw. But the goals are inverted — Hearts is about dumping, Spades is about predicting — so the strategic mindsets are very different.

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