Patent Publication Number: US-11383172-B1

Title: Music mash up collectable card game

Description:
PRIORITY CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION 
     This application claims priority pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 119(e) or 120 from U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/925,328 filed Mar. 19, 2018, and U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/472,847, filed Mar. 17, 2017. 
    
    
     FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention relates to a game system and more particularly to a music mash up collectable card game system and method using cards with tags and unique identifications, a single reading platform and a cover for card storage and for supporting a smart device. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     The known prior art of interest for electronic musical composition games use extended surface game play areas for accommodating multiple separately received game components, tokens or cards at different spaces or slots at a matrix of sensors with respect to the game surface. Both U.S. Pat. No. 6,525,252 issued to Klausen, et al. (hereafter ‘Klausen’) in 2003 for a “Device for Composing and Arranging Music,” and U.S. Publication No. 2010/0043625 A1 published in 2010 to Van Geenen, et al. (hereafter ‘Van Geenen’) for a “Musical Composition System and Method of Controlling a Generation of a Musical Composition” disclose devices for composing, arranging music, game boards and game play incorporating sensor devices, a plurality of game pieces, tokens or blocks for being received or arranged at sending or receiving positions with various playback game modes. The sensor device has a plurality of receiving positions, with pre-determined musical features, notes, beats, clips or samples for suitable musical features. These systems provide for spatial placement tokens by users on a spatial board configuration, determining respective locations and types of an assembly of tokens placed in a spatial configuration for translating a spatial ordering of the tokens in the spatial configuration into a temporal ordering, including arranged to detect or prevent at least an attempted placement of a token of a certain type at a position in the spatial ordering violating any of at least one constraint associated with the certain type. 
     Klausen discloses as an example, a musical block system including several musical blocks  1   a - 1   d ,  FIG. 1 , a plate part  2 ,  FIG. 2 , a sensor part  5 ,  FIG. 3 , and an optional sensor block. The musical block represents a note, a rhythm, a melodic sequence or other musical parameters. Each musical block may have a different shape and/or color and must be able to be stacked vertically. The plate part is an object to which the blocks are attached and is a two-dimensional array (x and y) where one axis equals time and the other axis determines which instrument/sample track to activate. The sensor part is able to determine where the blocks are placed on the plate part and which type of block each is. The sensor part includes a loudspeaker  6 , a microphone  7 , a connecting part  4 , and a control panel  8  having a number of control buttons  9   a - 9   c , such as ‘play’, ‘record’ and ‘stop’. The different positions of the blocks along the y-axis may represent different instrument tracks and each sub-population represents a certain musical feature. The sensor part determines position of the blocks and to which sub-population they belong allowing the creation of music composition, arrangements, soundscapes or other musical expressions. As blocks are moved the composition is changed accordingly. 
     The tokens  5 ,  6 ,  7  of Van Geenen, are configured for placement by a user in a spatial configuration on a playing surface  8  of the game board  2 . The playing surface  8  comprises a number of fields  9 , arranged in rows  10   a - 10   e  and columns  11   a - 11   j . The columns determine a spatial ordering, which is translated into a temporal ordering by the control unit  3 . That is to say that a first column  11   a  represents a first time interval of the composition and that the time advances by a certain time interval with each column. The time interval may be an absolute time interval or a relative time interval. For example, each column  11  may represent a bar, a beat or a note of a particular duration, depending on the chosen granularity. 
     The Van Geenen game board  2  includes sensors  13  positioned within the game board and arranged to determine the types of tokens placed on a field present over the respective sensor  13 . The sensor  13  may be a type of connector for mating with a corresponding connector on a token placed on the field, so as to interrogate the token as to its type and that of any token stacked on top of it. In another embodiment, the tokens  5 - 7  are provided with Radio-Frequency Identification tags, and the sensors  13  comprise transceivers for reading out type information from the tags. Other wireless or wired variants are conceivable, such as those using near field communication. 
     The Van Geenen interface  14  in the game board  2  allows the respective locations and types of the tokens  5 - 7  assembled in a spatial configuration on the playing surface  8  to be communicated to the control unit  3  via a corresponding interface  15  in the control unit  3 . The latter comprises a processor  16 , programmed by means of instructions stored in a memory unit  17 . The processor  16  has access to a further memory unit  18  containing data representative of composition rules as well as a database relating token types to aspects of musical fragments. The processor  16  is also able to control the visual display unit  4 , as well as an audio output stage  19  for driving a speaker system  20 . The Van Geenen spatial configuration, i.e., the amalgamation of the sub-assemblies of tokens, is placed on different game boards  2 , connected to control units in communication with each other. In that case, the users of the several game boards  2  could collaborate over a distance to compose a single piece of music. Such a system allowing for collaboration is even easier to implement using several embodiments of the second composition system. In particular the second composition system may dispense with a game board on which tokens are to be placed, but may instead use only representations of interlocking blocks or other types of tangible objects. Tokens of different dimensions may be used to represent aspects of fragments of corresponding different lengths, i.e. durations. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The present inventions facilitate an intuitive music platform with various modes of operation and game play including individual, studio mix, party modes as well as game play features in a music mash up collectable card game, with user interface features, methods and apparatus which may be used together with or independent of accessory devices as controllers, such as smartphones or smart device user interfaces. 
     In a present described embodiment a single reader game system may have a truncated pyramid platform with an actuator or a circular platform with a rotating actuator in an alternate embodiment. The platform is able to read many cards, each card having NFC embedded technology. The platforms use LEDs for input selection for slots or lanes. Bluetooth™ Smart Low energy (BTLE or BLE) may be used for communicating platform position or actuator use with light indicators for user selection and operation. The playing card game system centers around an electronic device, such as a smart phone or a tablet computer or other similar device, with a video game or scoring App running on the smart device. The smart device will communicate with the first housing, having the smart device wired link or as in the present embodiment wireless via Bluetooth™, Wi-Fi or another wireless similar protocol. 
     The single reader game system is compact and lightweight and is ideal for portability, allowing players to easily transport the apparatus. The system is of a simple yet rugged construction so as to produce a low cost structure. 
     Briefly summarized, the invention relates to a playing card reader game system for reading a plurality of type information identifiers, the system including a multiplicity of integrated circuit tags, each tag including type information identifiers, a multiplicity of playing cards, each card including at least one tag for transmitting one or more of the type information identifiers associated with the tag of each card, a first housing comprising a single reading area at a surface region of the housing for collecting a plurality of the cards each placed serially with one another in a series forming a collection of two or more cards at the surface region of the housing, an antenna subsystem in the housing with an antenna signal range to receive the type information identifiers associated with the collection of cards at the surface region, a tag reader for reading the type information identifiers received with the antenna subsystem from each card of the collection of cards at the surface region, a light source for simultaneously illuminating one or more of a multiplicity of illuminating colors in relation to the surface region of the housing, an actuator for changing one or more of the illuminating colors, the actuator further selecting the type information identifiers associated with the cards at the surface region to be received with the antenna subsystem, an information processor, and an audio subsystem in communication with the information processor at the first housing for issuing announcement sounds and music composition sounds responsive to the tag reader, light source and actuator. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
       For the purpose of facilitating an understanding of the invention, the accompanying drawings and detailed description illustrate preferred embodiments thereof, from which the invention, its structures, its construction and operation, its processes, and many related advantages may be readily understood and appreciated. 
         FIG. 1  is an isometric view of a preferred embodiment of the present invention in the form of a closed card reader game system. 
         FIG. 2  is an isometric view of the game system shown in  FIG. 1 , with a cover storing a deck of cards being removed from a reading platform. 
         FIG. 3  is an isometric view of the game system shown in  FIGS. 1 and 2 , with the cover inverted in a smart phone holder position, the deck of cards removed and a reading surface exposed. 
         FIG. 4  is an isometric view of the game system shown in  FIGS. 1-3 , in play with a first card being placed on the reading surface and a smart phone being supported by the cover. 
         FIG. 5  is an isometric view of the game system  FIGS. 1-4 , in play with a second card being stacked on top of the first card, both being on the reading surface. 
         FIG. 6  is an isometric view of the game system  FIGS. 1-5 , in play with a third card being stacked on the reading surface on top of both the first and second cards. 
         FIG. 7  is a plan and elevation view of the game system  FIGS. 1-6 , in a closed configuration. 
         FIG. 8  is an exploded isometric view of the game system shown in  FIG. 7 . 
         FIG. 9  is an isometric view of the game system with a single actuator. 
         FIG. 10  is a plan view of a sample card. 
         FIG. 11  is a plan view of another sample card. 
         FIG. 12  is an isometric view of another preferred embodiment of the present invention in the form of a cylindrically shaped game system. 
         FIG. 13  is a top plan view of the game system shown in  FIG. 12 , illustrating a reading surface. 
         FIG. 14  is a top plan view of the game apparatus shown in  FIG. 13 , illustrating a playing card on the reading surface. 
         FIG. 15  is an upward looking isometric view of the bottom of the game apparatus shown in  FIG. 12 . 
         FIG. 16  is the same view of the game system as shown in  FIG. 15 , but with an open battery compartment. 
         FIG. 17  is an isometric view of the game system shown in  FIGS. 12-17 , illustrating the reader. 
         FIG. 18  is a bottom plan view of the game system shown in  FIGS. 12-17 , with the bottom removed to illustrate internal electronics. 
         FIG. 19  is a top plan view of the game system identical to shown in  FIGS. 12-19 , illustrating the playing card in a first position on the reading surface. 
         FIG. 20  is a top plan view of the game system identical to  FIG. 19 , but illustrating the playing card on the reading surface rotated 90°. 
         FIG. 21  is a top plan view of the game system identical to  FIG. 19 , but illustrating the playing card on the reading surface rotated 180°. 
         FIG. 22  is a top plan view of the game system identical to  FIG. 19 , but illustrating the playing card on the reading surface rotated 270°. 
     
    
    
     DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     The following description is provided to enable those skilled in the art to make and use the described embodiments set forth in the best mode contemplated for carrying out the invention. An intuitive music composition game platform with various modes of operation in a single reader system and a single reading platform includes a cover for card storage and for supporting a smart device platform for reading playing cards with stacking features and colored light indicated selection and other indicia for user identification and selection. Various game modes include individual, studio mix, party modes game play features in music mash up collectable card games, which may be used together with or independent of accessory devices as controllers, or smart device user interface selection and operation communications. Various modifications, equivalents, variations, and alternatives, however, will remain readily apparent to those skilled in the art. Any and all such modifications, variations, equivalents, and alternatives are intended to fall within the spirit and scope of the present invention. 
     Each playing card includes at least one integrated circuit (IC) chip tag embedded with each playing card, with each tag including type information identifiers for transmitting one or more of the type information identifiers associated with the tag of each playing card. The tag has circuitry and memory for data storage and transmission and may be provided as a Near Field Communication (NFC), Radio Frequency Identification (RFID), Bluetooth™ (BLE) or Bluetooth™ Low Energy (BTLE) tags or other similar communications means to store and transmit type information identifiers. In the present embodiment NFC type tags are employed that uniquely identify the type information identifiers. The NFC tag reader for reading the type information identifiers are received via an antenna subsystem from each card of the collection of cards at the surface region of the housing, uses a single NFC tag reader loop antenna subsystem in the housing with an antenna signal range to receive the type information identifiers associated with the collection of cards at the surface region to read the tag and its unique identifiers. The NFC reader and antenna subsystems of the present described embodiment may be provided as an NXP-brand reader chip that handles NFC communication protocol, however other tag IC chips may be used such as RFID, BLE or BTLE tags or the like. The tags antenna subsystem is fairly typical with loops or coils of copper insulated wire, or a printed circuit board (PCB) antenna may be used or other antennae configurations optimized to ensure FCC compliance. 
     The information processor used with the NFC tag reader and antenna subsystems for reading the type information identifiers may employ an ARM processor, known in the industry. The type information identifiers are received in relation to a light source for simultaneously illuminating one or more of a multiplicity of illuminating colors in relation to the surface region of the housing and operates LEDs there at as one or more light sources. The actuator switch or the like is provided for changing one or more of the illuminating colors. The actuator facilitates use of the single reading area at a surface region to avoid the need for multiple spatial slots or a matrix of sensors. The actuator is further used to select the type information identifiers associated with the cards at the surface region to be received with the antenna subsystem in association with game play, also using an audio subsystem in communication with at the first housing for issuing announcement sounds and music composition sounds responsive to the tag reader, light source and actuator, and plays sounds along with having other capabilities. 
     Certain techniques for issuing announcement sounds and music composition with responsive light source and actuator or sensor structures include Applicants&#39; Assignees U.S. Pat. No. 8,088,003 to Bickerton, et al. for “Audio/visual display toy for use with rhythmic responses” issued Jan. 3, 2012 disclosing a game having a base structure including an array of lights with associated music, and U.S. Patent Application No. 2017/0186411 A1 to Mintz, et al. for “Apparatus, Systems, and Methods for Music Generation” published Jun. 29, 2017 (hereafter ‘Mintz’) relating to game play composing musical compositions using musical content to synthesize music, which are each herein incorporated by reference in their entirety. The smart device is in communication with the information processor with the tag reader identifying the type information identifiers received for use by the smart device. 
     A commercial version of the Mintz game is presently being marketed by Applicants&#39; Assignee under the brand DROPMIX™ and includes hardware having five lanes for card play and a location for a smart device, such as an iPhone™. 
     An embodiment of the present invention illustrated in  FIGS. 1-7  is a compact and portable single reader game system  10 . The game system includes a first, lower, or platform housing  14  and a removable second, upper or cover  12 . The game system is shaped generally as a geometric frustum, or more particularly, generally as a truncated pyramid with rounded edges. 
     The cover  12  includes a smooth top surface  16 , a recessed inner surface  18 ,  FIGS. 2 and 3 , two peripheral ridges  20 ,  22  where each is bisected by a groove  24 ,  26 . The cover  12  is able to function as a storage bin for a collection of cards  28  placed on the inner surface  18  when the cover  12  is mounted to the platform  14  as shown  FIG. 1 , where the top surface  16  is uppermost. When the cover is removed and inverted as shown in  FIG. 3 , after the cards are removed, the cover functions as a holder for a smart device, such as a smart phone  30 ,  FIGS. 4-6 , which may be held in the grooves  24 ,  26  and against the ridges  20 ,  22 . The cover may be formed of a flexible translucent material to indicate the position of the stored cards when viewed from the top. The material also allows the cover  12  to fit snugly to the platform  14  and the cards to fit snugly to the cover. 
     The first platform housing  14  may have only one matted top reading surface  40   FIGS. 2 and 3  providing a single reading area at a surface region, to act as a lane or slot on which a multiplicity of cards (as many as thirty), such as the cards  42 ,  44 ,  46 ,  48 ,  FIG. 4 , may be stacked. Each card includes embedded integrated circuit tags for near field communication technology (NFC) or a radio-frequency identification system (RFID). A sensor or antenna subsystem  43  and tag reader and information processor  45  mounted in the platform may read each card stacked on the top surface and transmits the unique type information identifiers of each card to the smart device  30  mounted to the cover  12 . A speaker/microphone or audio subsystem  47  may also be mounted in the platform. The audio subsystem  47  may be provided for issuing the announcement and music composition sounds responsively with an output speaker for making audible sounds, and may further include a microphone feature for receiving audible information from a game player user. 
     Slanted sidewalls  50 ,  52 ,  54 ,  56 ,  FIG. 3 , of the base platform  14  may support the top surface  40 . One or more actuators may be mounted to the platform and to be used by players during game play. The actuator provided may be mechanical switch electrical switch input as discussed below, or in the alternate may include encoded or potentiometer rotational turn switching for rotational input, other input mechanisms may include touch or capacitive sensing or audible command switch inputs or the like. An actuator rim  60  may be mounted around the top surface  40 . As a further alternative, the actuator may include four switch panels mounted to the four sidewalls. Two of the actuator panels  62 ,  64  are shown in  FIG. 3 , mounted in the sidewalls  50 ,  52 , respectively. Or, as another alternative, a single panel  66 ,  FIG. 9 , may be the actuator. Each player uses the actuator during game play as will be explained in detail below. 
     The electronics in the platform  14  may include a main processor and information processors for NFC, BTLE, BLE, Wi-Fi communication with iOS and Android or other smart devices like cell phones, iPads, Apple TV, Alexa, and Chromcast. An LED light or lights may be placed in conspicuous locations, such as along an upper rim light guide  70  and/or along a lower border, or behind the actuator panels to function as backlighting along the sides of the platform. The lights may function as feedback to the players to provide information such as actions needed to be taken, taken actions that are accepted, and/or those actions that are not accepted. Each side of the platform may have its own feedback color and may light up when information is directed to a player. 
     During play, a multiplicity of cards may be played by stacking them on the reading surface  40 , as shown in  FIGS. 4-6 . It is noted that the cards may be stacked without regard to the angle of placement of each card and yet the platform assembly will still read each card. For example, a first player may place the first card  42 ,  FIG. 4 , on the sole top surface  40 . The tag or tags of the first card  42  is read by the platform assembly and transmitted to the smart device  30 , which may record type information identifiers and assign points. A second player during his/her turn may then stack another card  80 ,  FIG. 5 , on top of the first card  42 . The platform assembly reads the second card  80 , transmits the card&#39;s information to the smart device  30  that may then make adjustments, such as by adding or subtracting players&#39; points. Thereafter, the first or a third player may play a third card  82 ,  FIG. 6 . The third card is stacked on top of the second card  80  to allow the platform assembly to read the third card and transmit information to the smart device. The smart device then makes appropriate adjustments to the game. The system may read and make adjustments for up to thirty cards stacked on the reading surface  40  during a game. The cards may be collectible and different decks may be used or developed to play different games. 
     The system  10  may be formed of ABS plastic and measures about 6-7 inches square by 1-2 inches tall. Three AA/LR6 alkaline batteries may power the system having a voltage range of 2.7-4.8 volts. An LED may input lanes colored yellow/red, red, red/blue, blue, blue/green, with the light source being capable of simultaneously illuminating one or more of a multiplicity of illuminating colors in relation to the surface region of the housing, preferably a single or two colors at a time being indicative of the type information identifiers associated with the cards at the surface region to be received as discussed herein in connection with the described game play using color or other external visual indicia associated with playing cards that may be played by the game player user. Players may change colors by tapping on the input actuator. This simulates the functionality of reader and the cards. 
     Referring now to the exploded view of  FIG. 8  of the present described embodiment, the top element of the system  10  is the cover  12  having dimensions of approximately 3.5 inches by 3.5 inches. The next element is an LED light guide  86 , followed by the card reading surface  40 . The next elements are the sidewalls  88 , and the actuators, such as the actuator elements  62 ,  64  or the alternative actuator  66 ,  FIG. 9 , followed by a floor  90  and a base  92 . Together the slanted sidewalls  50 ,  52 ,  54 ,  56 , elements  62 ,  64 , light guide  86 , and floor  90  form an outer peripheral bezel sloping face adjacent the surface region card reading surface  40  single reading area, having dimensions of approximately 6.25 inches by 6.25 inches. Thus the outer peripheral surface area of the system  10  footprint has an overall top plan view surface area of about forty (40) square inches. The top reading surface  40  at the surface region provides the single reading area having dimensions of approximately 3.5 inches by 3.5 inches, with the single reading area of the surface region surface area of about twelve (12) square inches at the card reading surface  40 . The playing cards discussed herein have dimensions of approximately 2.5 inches by 3.5 inches, with a surface area of about nine (9) square inches. In the circular platform single reading area with a rotating actuator alternate embodiment of  FIGS. 12-22  discussed below, the outer bezel about the single reading area surface region has a diameter of approximately 4.25 inches, with a surface area of about fourteen (14) square inches top reading surface for placement of the playing cards, as described herein. 
     Accordingly with the playing card surface area being about nine (9) square inches, and the single reading area surface region being about twelve (12) square inches with an overall surface area of about forty (40) square inches in the present described embodiment, while alternate circular platform embodiment overall surface area and its single reading area surface region has about fourteen (14) square inches, the system overall upper surface area ranges approximately between 14-40 square inches. With reference to the approximate 9 square inch surface area of the playing cards, the system overall surface area ranges about one and one-half to four and one-half times (1.5-4.5×) the playing card surface area of the described embodiments, or approximately one to five times (1-5×) the playing card surface area generally, and preferably less than 5. 
     Thus the system is generally sized to have overall top plan view surface area of less than five times that of the playing card surface area. With the single reading area of the present described embodiment surface region surface area of about twelve (12) square inches, and the circular platform single reading area alternate embodiment single reading area surface region of about fourteen (14) square inches, with single reading area surface region surface area thus ranging about one and one-half and less than two times (1.5-2×) the playing card surface area, preferably less than 2. Thus the single reading area surface region surface area is generally less than two times that of the playing card surface area. Accordingly the single reading area surface region surface area is generally less than two times, with the overall system generally sized with surface area of less than five times that of the playing card surface areas respectively. 
     Each of the multiplicity of cards includes an integrated circuit tag  94 ,  FIGS. 10 and 11 , between paper layers, each card having dimensions of approximately 2.5 inches by 3.5 inches. Printing may appear on both sides or if desired just one side. In the alternative, other material such as plastic layers may be used. The cards may be referred to as ‘smart cards’ and each includes the NFC/RFID tag. Each card may a thickness of about 350 microns (about 0.014 inches) and weighs about 300 grams per square meter. Each card has a value and the value determines whether one card ‘beats’ an opponent&#39;s card. Referring to  FIG. 10 , one type of card, referred to as a ‘music card’  100  may have a graphic  102  with a name of the artist or song  104  immediately below the graphic. In the lower right corner an icon  106  may be placed indicating the deck from which the card comes. A symbol  108  in the lower left corner may indicate the musical instrument the card represents and plays, and a symbol  110  in the upper left corner indicates the levels of intensity of the card&#39;s sound. The card may also have a color tone to match one of the colors of the LED light illuminating the platform, with stacking features and colored light indicated selection or other indicia for user identification and selection. When played by stacking on the reading surface and pushing the actuator causes an equalizer to spin. Based on the level of the top card the equalizer clears the cards and they are placed on a discard pile. In a game called ‘Clash’ the equalizer may only instruct that the cards of an opponent are cleared. 
     In general terms, in one form of game play, cards are divided between player/opponents and a coin is flipped to determine which player goes first. Each player plays one or more cards per turn and when a card is played, the player receives a value or points. The value is added to that player&#39;s score. To end a turn the player depresses the actuator. If needed the light of the platform will light up to alert the player to depress the actuator. Play continues until a value or point threshold is reach by one of the players and that player is declared the winner. 
     In a game called ‘Game Master’ the App in the smart phone is like a casino dealer or the Dungeon Master of the game called Dungeon and Dragons and the players are requested to guess a mix of music being played. The music comes from a stack of cards loaded on the reading surface. During set-up, each player stacks his/her cards on the reading surface when given a green light. During reading the color will change to red. During multiple rounds of play, the players are told to perform certain actions by the app. For example, a player may be told to stack three orange cards on the reading surface. The platform may then light up in the color orange and blink three times to confirm that the player completed a proper action. The platform may also use the speaker to announce what it needs. A player may also give instructions to the platform (through the microphone) of actions to take, for example, remove a certain amount of cards from another player. To do this, the players need to stack their cards face down on the reading surface and the platform would announce that the other player must put a certain number of cards of a certain color on the reading surface. Play continues until one of the players has all of the cards. 
     In the Name that Mix (NTM) game mode the player explores Music Mixing by having the game mode that asks the users to guess the current mix of music being played. The music comes from the stack of cards which the player users can stack as a collection to load into the game before the game begins. The App will deconstruct all of the cards, taking each part of the song out, and the App will then create a random “mix” that has parts from all of the cards that were placed on the system at the start. Since the reader system  10  provides 20 Wild Cards, the App will be able to create over 40MM different combinations of mixes for the users to guess. The App will play a random mix from the pieces of music from the cards placed on the single reading area at the system  10  surface region. Each player takes turns trying to guess the parts of the mix being playing. The game play proceeds as follows: If a player/team thinks they know a certain part, they will place the card on the system  10 ; Player/Team taps the appropriate actuator of the color they want to choose; Once it lands on a color they want, they will hit the actuator to lock it in; Player/Team gets points for correct answer; Goal: Player/Team with the most points at the end of X rounds, wins. Players will take turns using the cards to guess the parts of the current mix playing. To attempt a guess the player will place their card on the system and hit the actuator to illuminate the lane to the color of the piece of the song they think is being played. 
     In the Clash game or mode each player may start with a personal deck of 30 cards having six types of cards. Four basic card types, green bass, blue beat, red loop and yellow lead will each play a fixed audio sample when placed into a matching colored lane or slot on the platform. Multicolor wild cards may be placed into any lane or slot and play different audio samples as a function of where the card is placed. FX cards trigger special events. They may be played in different lanes based on their gameplay function. At the start of a game, the cards are shuffled and each player draws a hand of three to five cards depending on the number of players. The system randomly selects a player to go first. On each turn each player may perform two actions from among the following: play a basic or wild card into a matching lane or slot. If the lane is already occupied the player must play a card of equal or higher value. The light will indicate which player controls each lane. The player then plays an FX card and actuates the equalizer. The equalizer randomly cycles through the cards on the platform and if it lands on an opponent&#39;s card, all of the opponent&#39;s cards are cleared of power value. Within three seconds after playing the second card the player&#39;s turn is over and he/she draws two cards. 
     Scoring of the clash game is as follows: when a player plays a card on a lane one point is received. When an opponent&#39;s card is removed one point is received. After the first turn, should one of the four basic colors not be represented on the board, one point is earned for adding a card of the missing color. Should a player&#39;s cards occupy all five colored lanes during a turn one more point is received. 
     In a game named ‘FX’ the cards may have a graphic  120 ,  FIG. 11 , a card name  122 , the card level  124  in the upper left hand corner, the card&#39;s ability  126  in the lower left corner and a deck icon  128 . In a game called ‘party,’ each player begins with fifteen cards and draws three to five cards. The game lasts for five rounds and the app on the smart device will make requests of each player in each round. The requests comes from different information contained on the cards, such as color, value, instrument and music type. After each round the app will announce the number of cards to draw. The quicker a request is completed the more points are given. A bonus request is displayed after each round and more points are provided if the request is successfully completed. After five rounds the scores are added and the game is over. 
     The single physical reading surface has a major advantage over older apparatus in that it is compact and lightweight and is ideal for portability, allowing players to easily transport the system  10 . The system is also simply constructed and yet is rugged and robust so as to produce a low cost structure. Because there is only one lane or zone in the system, there is no confusion on where to play a card. Simply stack cards on top of each other with each player&#39;s turn and everything plays accordingly. The system is about placing cards and interacting with lights and an actuator while the system provides feedback based on game play, only reading at the single reading area at the single surface region of a housing for collecting a plurality of the cards each placed serially with one another in a series forming a collection of two or more cards at the surface region of the housing. 
     Another compact reading game system  200  is illustrated in  FIG. 12 , where the apparatus has a generally cylindrical platform  202 . The platform is divided into several portions. A lower portion  204  of the housing includes an LED base  206  for providing feed back to the players and for storing the NFC tag reader, the antenna subsystem, the processor, the audio subsystem and other electronics for operation. Above the lower portion  204  is an actuator in the form of a selection dial  210  which a player twists to input data to the game system. It is noted that the twistable dial  210  is a substitute for the alternative actuators  60 ,  62 ,  64  and  70  shown in  FIG. 2  or the actuator  66 ,  FIG. 9 . The selection dial  210  includes a top reading surface  212 ,  FIGS. 12 and 13 , for placement of one or more cards, such as the card  220 . 
     Referring to  FIGS. 15 and 16 , the bottom surface  222  is illustrated showing a battery cover  224  and a battery compartment  226 . Referring to  FIGS. 17 and 18 , the reader  230  and electronics  232  are shown. In  FIGS. 19-22 , rotation of the dial  210  and of the card  220  is shown in rotational positions of 0°, 90°, 180°, and 270°. 
     The game systems disclosed in detail above have great play value, are fun to use and easy to operate, and yet the game systems are each compact, structurally robust, and they may be produced at reasonable cost. 
     From the foregoing, it can be seen that there has been provided features for an improved game system. While particular embodiments and variations of the present invention have been shown and described in great detail, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made without departing from the invention in its broader aspects. Therefore, the aim is to cover all such changes and modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention. The matters set forth in the foregoing description and accompanying drawings are offered by way of illustrations only and not as limitations. The actual scope of the invention is to be defined by the subsequent claims as mandated by the United States Code, Title 35, Section 112, when viewed in their proper perspective based on the prior art.