About Baazi Club
Baazi Club exists because the best card games are the ones you grew up playing with family — and because no one should be excluded from playing them just because mainstream apps weren't built with them in mind.
The story
Baazi Club is built by Gurinder Singh, an independent developer based in India.
The project started from a simple observation: most popular card-game apps on the Play Store work poorly — or not at all — with screen readers like TalkBack. Cards are images without descriptions. Buttons aren't labeled. Turn announcements never come. For a blind player who wants to play UNO with their nephew, or Hand Cricket with their cousin in another city, the apps designed for everyone often shut them out completely.
That's the gap Baazi Club tries to close. Every screen, every button, every game event is audible — and the visual side is built to match. Sighted players get a polished, fast game; blind and low-vision players get the full experience too. Same app, same room, same game.
What guides the design
Every feature in Baazi Club is evaluated against a single test:
Can a blind player enjoy this as much as a sighted player?
If the answer is no, the feature gets rebuilt — or doesn't ship. This isn't a marketing line. It's the literal way decisions get made. A new card animation isn't approved until its audio counterpart is just as expressive. A new room creation feature isn't approved until the TalkBack flow is just as fast as the visual one.
The games — why these four?
- Bhaabi is the card game I grew up with in Punjab — trick-taking, fast, social. Almost no apps offer it well.
- Ninety-Nine is a globally popular pile-counting game, perfect for short matches.
- UNO needs no introduction — but no accessible UNO app exists at this quality level.
- Hand Cricket is a uniquely Indian schoolyard tradition. It deserved a digital home that respected its simple, addictive structure.
What's free, what's paid?
Baazi Club is free to use. There are no advertisements, no real-money gambling, no in-app purchases that gate gameplay.
In the future, optional cosmetic or convenience features may become paid — but the core gameplay will always remain free for everyone. See the Terms of Service for details.
Privacy commitment
Baazi Club collects only the minimum data needed to run multiplayer games and save your progress. No advertising trackers, no analytics that profile you, no selling data to third parties. Read the Privacy Policy for specifics.
How to reach me
Bug reports, feature requests, accessibility feedback, or just to say hi:
For accessibility-specific feedback in particular, please get in touch — your input directly shapes the next version.
The current state
Baazi Club is currently in Android internal testing. An iOS version is planned but not in active development yet. The website at baaziclub.net is the canonical home for downloads, rules, and updates.