Gender-neutral card deck retires king, queen and jack

The genderless deck replaces king, queen and jack with gold, silver and bronze.

Berit van Dobbenburgh, general director of The Dutch bridge bond board plays with the updated version deck of cards designed by Indy Millink, which replaces the old picture cards with gold, silver and bronze at the Bridge Museum, in Leerdam, Netherlands on January 16, 2021.
Reuters

Berit van Dobbenburgh, general director of The Dutch bridge bond board plays with the updated version deck of cards designed by Indy Millink, which replaces the old picture cards with gold, silver and bronze at the Bridge Museum, in Leerdam, Netherlands on January 16, 2021.

Indy Mellink, a Dutch card fan, had been explaining a game to her cousins last summer when she asked herself: why should a king be worth more than a queen?

The 23-year-old forensic psychology graduate, encouraged by her father, decided it was time to break with the centuries-old tradition of sexual inequality in playing card decks that rank men above women.

“If we have this hierarchy that the king is worth more than the queen then this subtle inequality influences people in their daily life because it’s just another way of saying ‘hey, you’re less important,” she said in an interview. 

“Even subtle inequalities like this do play a big role.”

After a lot of trial and error, she designed a genderless deck in which the images of a king, queen and jack were replaced with gold, silver and bronze.

Reuters

Berit van Dobbenburgh, general director of The Dutch bridge bond board and Gerard Hilte owner of the museum play with the updated version deck of cards designed by Indy Millink, which replaces the old picture cards with gold, silver and bronze at the Bridge Museum, in Leerdam, Netherlands on January 16, 2021.

Sexual inequality in games

Friends and family snapped up the first 50 decks of GSB (Gold, Silver, Bronze) cards, which have images of gold bars, silver coins and a bronze shield. 

Mellink had more made and began selling them online.

Within a few months, she had sent out around 1,500 packs, including to Belgium, Germany, France and the United States.

Game shops have also shown interest, she said.

Mellink has been testing the cards out on players, who said they had never been conscious of sexual inequality in decks before.

Switching would take some getting used to.

“It is good that we reflect on gender neutrality,” said Berit van Dobbenburgh, head of the Dutch Bridge Association, while playing with the new cards. It would be complicated to make a formal switch because that would require updating the rules, she said.

“I wonder if it’s worth it. But gender neutrality, I am all for it! It’s great that someone of this age has noticed this. It’s the new generation.”

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