Follow Me 42, the national game of Texas FOLLOW ME 42 T E X A S THE NATIONAL GAME OF TEXAS

How to Play Texas 42

From the first shuffle to the seventh mark

The basics

Texas 42 is a trick-taking game played with dominoes instead of cards. Four players sit in fixed partnerships: North and South versus East and West. Each hand uses seven tricks; every tile belongs to exactly one trick. The partnership that wins the bid tries to make its contract by capturing enough points in tricks; the defenders try to set the bid by keeping points away from them. Most social and tournament games go to seven marks; many tables instead play to 250 points with bidding and scoring that work like the point-game variant described on Pagat.com. This page focuses on the marks-style structure common in Texas.

If you already play Spades or Bridge, think of 42 as whist with tiles: there is usually a trump number (blanks through sixes), you must follow the led suit when you can, and the highest legal tile wins the trick. Many kitchen tables also play doubles as trump, where only the seven doubles are trumps (not an eighth pip suit beside blanks–sixes). That call is not part of official tournament play; Follow Me 42 will offer doubles-as-trump only as an option for unranked social games. The twist is that each domino has two ends, so suit membership follows the numbers on the tile.

The domino set

Texas 42 uses a full double-six set: 28 tiles. Each integer from blank (0) through six appears paired with every integer including itself. The seven doubles (0-0, 1-1, …, 6-6) sit at the top of most boxed sets; the remaining twenty-one tiles are the non-double combinations.

Seven doubles

Twenty-one non-doubles

Count dominoes

Five tiles are called count dominoes because they add weighted value toward the 42 points in a hand. A tile’s count value goes by its total pips: dominoes whose ends sum to 10 are worth 10 points (6-4 and 5-5). Dominoes whose ends sum to 5 are worth 5 points each (5-0, 4-1, and 3-2). Together those five tiles contribute 35 points. The other seven points are one point per trick. Hence 35 + 7 = 42, the name of the game.

When the bidding side wins a trick, it adds both the trick point and any count on tiles in that trick to its scoring total for the hand. Defense scores the same way on tricks it wins.

Dealing and seating

Partners sit across from each other. Shuffle the 28 tiles face down, then deal seven tiles to each player. You may look at your own hand only. Many tables have the dealer’s opponents draw their hands first, then the dealer’s partner, then the dealer; others deal in rotation. Bidding starts with the player to the dealer’s left and moves clockwise; each player bids once or passes, and each bid must be higher than the last. Some clubs use a different rule for who speaks first; agree before you start.

Partnership layout

Table showing North and South as one team, East and West as the other NORTH (your partner) SOUTH (you) WEST EAST 7 tiles each · NS vs EW

Bidding

Bidding starts low and climbs. Bids from 30 through 42 are point contracts: you promise your partnership will take at least that many of the 42 points in the hand (trick points plus count on tiles you win). A bid of 42 is a promise to take every point. Under standard marks scoring (including Pagat’s description), every successful contract in this 30–42 range scores exactly one mark for the bidding side. Get set: opponents score marks as described under Scoring below.

Some tables end the spoken number sequence at 41 and jump straight to “one mark” for all tricks; that is the same obligation and the same one-mark reward as bidding 42 points. After that tier, the auction moves to multiple marks: you must take all seven tricks and all 42 points, and you score several marks at once if you make it. Bids are spoken as 2 marks, 3 marks… In much of Texas you will hear 84 for two marks, 126 for three, then 168, 210, 252, and 294 (seven marks). Those multiples name how deep the contract is, not extra points beyond 42.

Under rules described by John McLeod (Pagat) and many tournament traditions, the highest opening bid is normally two marks (often called 84). Some house rules allow higher jump openings for contracts such as Plunge; Follow Me 42’s initial build does not include Plunge or other jump specials (see the note on special contracts below). After someone has opened at two marks, later players may raise one mark at a time. House rules differ; N42PA and local tournaments publish their own caps.

Some casual groups allow special contracts such as Nello (a bid to lose every trick). Nello is not permitted in N42PA-sanctioned tournament play. Follow Me 42’s first release targets ranked, tournament-style play: no Nello, Plunge, Sevens, or other special contracts, so tables match what you see in sanctioned events. Later on we plan to add optional house rules for unranked social games, so friends can turn on the variants they grew up with without affecting competitive ladders (including doubles as trump and similar casual-only options).

If all four players pass, standard practice in many rule sets is to throw in the hand and redeal; elsewhere the dealer must bid 30. Decide which you use.

Bid ladder: two layers of the auction

Layer 1 · Point bids 30–42

Each bar is how much of the hand’s 42 points you promise to capture. Higher bids are harder. If you make any successful bid in this range, your side still scores exactly one mark (same reward for 30 or 42).

Layer 2 · Mark bids 84–294

These are deeper contracts: all seven tricks and all 42 points. The spoken numbers (84, 126, …, 294) are traditional nicknames for two through seven marks. Bar height here is marks at stake if you make the bid—not “more points than 42.”

Trump

Whoever wins the bid names the contract for the hand. In N42PA-style tournament play there are exactly seven ways to name a trump suit: the seven pip numbers (blanks through sixes). That is the full set of official trump options—there is no eighth or ninth “trump” on the card.

Follow Me (often called no-trump) is not a trump suit and not “trump number eight.” It means no suit is trump for that hand: tricks are won in the suit led, with doubles ranking high in their own suits, under whatever rules your event allows. Doubles as trump is a separate casual call where only the seven doubles are trumps; it is not tournament play and will not appear in Follow Me 42 ranked matches. Unranked tables will be able to turn on doubles-as-trump and similar house options later.

The everyday structure rests on seven pip suits: blanks, ones, twos, threes, fours, fives, and sixes. The bidder may name one of those numbers as trump; every tile that shows that number on an end is a trump for that hand, and the double of that number is the highest trump in that suit.

Dual membership

Before trump is set, a non-double tile belongs to two pip suits at once (for example, the 6-3 is both a six and a three). The miniature tiles below show the same 6-3 before and after threes are named trump.

This exclusivity is absolute. Once a pip number is named trump, every tile showing that number belongs only to the trump suit for the entire hand. It has no other suit. A player holding the 6-3 when threes are trump cannot use it to follow sixes — they are void in sixes unless they hold another six-end tile that is not trump.

Rank within a numbered trump suit

Suit ranking is fully deterministic: the double of the trump suit is always highest, followed by the other trumps ranked by their non-trump end from six (high) down to blank (low). There are no ties.

Seven trump suits in tournament play (example tile each)

Casual-only: doubles as trump

At kitchen tables you may hear doubles as trump: it is not another pip suit. Only the seven double tiles are trumps, ranked 6-6 (high) down to 0-0 (low), with special rules for following a double lead. Recognize it when you see it; in Follow Me 42 you only pick it when an unranked game allows that option.

Playing tricks

The high bidder (declarer) leads the first trick. Later tricks are led by whoever won the previous one. On a non-trump lead that is not a double, the tile belongs to the suit of its higher number (blanks count as zero).

When you must follow, a tile in your hand normally counts as belonging to either suit on it, provided that suit is not trump. For example, if sixes are led and threes are not trump, you may follow with the 6-3 using the six on that tile. If threes are trump, the 6-3 is exclusively a trump tile. It cannot be used to follow a sixes lead under any circumstances; you would need a different six (or play off if you have no legal six).

When threes are trump

With threes named trump, the 6-3 is a trump only. A lead of the 6-2 counts as sixes (higher end is six). Holding only the 6-3 among “six” tiles, you do not have sixes to follow; the 6-3 does not count as sixes for follow purposes. If you have no plain six, you may discard or trump according to the usual rules.

If you have no tile in the led suit, you may play anything, including trump. When doubles are named trump (a casual / unranked option in Follow Me 42, not tournament play), special follow rules apply.

When a suit is trump, trump beats non-trump. Among trump tiles, the one that ranks highest for that trump suit wins. In a Follow Me (no-trump) hand there is no trump suit, so that rule does not apply.

Example trick (sixes are trump; first tile is not trump)

You must follow suit if you are able to. Playing a tile from a different suit when you hold a tile in the led suit is called reneging and results in the immediate loss of the hand — the opposing team scores all marks at stake. After any hand ends, players may review played tiles to verify no renege occurred.

Scoring

Matches are usually played to seven marks. A classic Texas tally draws the seven marks as strokes that spell ALL: the first three marks form the letter A, the next two form the first L, and the last two finish the word. Some groups use plain tally bundles (four verticals plus a diagonal for five) or play to 250 points instead; confirm locally.

Seven marks spelling ALL SEVEN MARKS → A L L ALL one stroke per mark, shape per tradition

For point bids (30–42), a made contract earns one mark for the bidding side. For mark bids (84 and up / two or more marks), a made contract scores the number of marks bid.

If the contract is set: for point bids (30–42), a set always costs the bidding team exactly one mark: the opponents score one mark regardless of how high the bid was. For mark bids, the opponents score the full number of marks that were bid.

Trump reference card

Trump callWhat it meansNotes
BlanksEvery tile showing a 0 is trumpDouble-blank (0-0) is highest
Ones (Aces)Every tile showing a 1 is trumpDouble-one (1-1) is highest
Twos (Deuces)Every tile showing a 2 is trumpDouble-two (2-2) is highest
Threes (Treys)Every tile showing a 3 is trumpDouble-three (3-3) is highest
FoursEvery tile showing a 4 is trumpDouble-four (4-4) is highest
FivesEvery tile showing a 5 is trumpDouble-five (5-5) is highest
SixesEvery tile showing a 6 is trumpDouble-six (6-6) is highest
DoublesAll seven doubles are trump ranked 6-6 down to 0-0Doubles leave their pip suits entirely
No-trump (Follow Me)No trump suit; doubles are highest in their own suitNot permitted in N42PA tournament play