Solitaire Cards

Posted on by admin
Solitaire Cards Average ratng: 4,3/5 7255 reviews

OBJECTIVE OF SOLITAIRE: The objective is to move all cards from the tableau and from the stockpile into four build piles. NUMBER OF PLAYERS: 1 player NUMBER OF CARDS: 52 card deck. To achieve this, stack the cards on the tableau in descending order (King to Ace). Make sure to alternate colors. Beat the game when you have sorted all cards into the foundations. By playing card games such as solitaire, you can exercise your mind while having fun. World of Solitaire has over 100 solitaire games, including Spider, Klondike, FreeCell and Pyramid. 100% FREE, undo support, multiple decks, stats, custom backgrounds and more. Created with HTML5.

Solitaire Cards

What time is it? It's Solitaire Time!!

Solitaire is a classic card game that is both fun and educational. Solitaire Time keeps your mind sharp, and your day fun!

Solitaire is played with 52 cards. Stack cards in descending order, alternating color. Start at the King, and build down to the Ace.

The goal of the game is to get all cards into the foundations in the top-right corner. Beat Solitaire when all cards are in the foundations

  • Stack cards in alternating color
  • Build down from king to ace
  • Click the deck in the top-left corner for more cards
  • Get all cards into their suit-oriented foundations
  • Beat solitaire when all 52 cards are in their four suit-oriented foundations!

DISCLAIMER: The games on this website are using PLAY (fake) money. No payouts will be awarded, there are no 'winnings', as all games represented by 247 Games LLC are free to play. Play strictly for fun.

There are four different types of stacks in klondike solitaire. They are:

  • The Draw: The stack of facedown cards in the upper left corner.
  • The Waste: The faceup cards next to the Draw in the upper left corner.
  • The Foundations: The four spaces in the upper right corner.
  • The Tableau: The seven columns that make up the main table.
Details
Solitaire
  • 28 cards are dealt out into seven piles, in the following manner: The first pile (left to right) includes one card, the second pile includes two cards, the third pile includes three cards, etc., so that the last pile has seven cards.
  • The top card of each pile is turned face up.
  • The cards that are left after setting up the tableau are placed in the draw pile, face down.
The goal of klondike solitaire
  • Build all four suits up from ace to king in separate stacks.
Gameplay
  • Turn cards from the draw pile over one at a time. If the card you turn over is playable (either on a foundation or on the tableau), you may do so.
  • As they become available, the four aces can be played onto the foundations. Cards of the same suit may be played on each ace in ascending order, from low (2) to high (king).
  • On the tableau, cards are played in descending order, alternating colors.
  • If a column in the tableau is empty, any visible king can be moved to fill that space.

About the Klondike Gold Rush

After gold was found in Rabbit Creek in north-western Canada in 1896, the Klondike stampede saw an estimated 100,000 prospectors trying to reach the gold fields.

Only around 40,000 actually did, and only 4000 of those managed to get some gold.

Boom towns appeared along the route to accommodate the prospectors. Dawson City was founded where the Klondike and the Yukon River meet. In 1896 it housed 500 residents. By the summer of 1898 there were 30,000.

The rush for gold was ended in 1899 when prospectors moved on to the next big thing at Nome, Alaska. When the first census was taken in 1901 the population had declined to 9,000.

You can learn more about the Klondike gold rush here...


The History of Solitaire

It's a bit of a mystery where solitaire actually comes from. Several games are of French origin, such as La Belle Lucie, Le Cadran, La Nivernaise, Le Loi Salique. But that doesn't necessarily mean it started in France. It could just as likely have its roots in Germany or Scandinavia. It has its earliest written appearance in the 1783 edition of the German book of games, Das neue Königliche L'Hombre-Spiel, where it is referred to as Patiencespiel. It was described as a competitive card game where players would take turns to play with separate decks of cards. Playing by one's self probably came out of people enjoying practicing for competitive games.

Worldwide, the game has many names. In Britain, it is still often called Patience. In modern France, the game is more often called réussite, which means success. Other languages, such as Norwegian and Danish often use the word Kabal, which means secret knowledge, to describe these games. The outcome of a game could possibly have been thought to be a type of fortune telling.

The first collection of solitaire card games in the English language was written by Lady Adelaide Cadogan with her book of Illustrated Games of Patience published in 1870. Before this, there had been no literature about it, not even in such books as Abbe Bellecour's Academie des Jeux (1674), Charles Cotton's The Compleat Gamester (1674), and Bohn's Handbook of Games (1850), all of which are used as reference on card games.

It is said that Napoleon played solitaire during his exile. Many games bare his name or the name of the island he was exiled to: St. Helena, Napoleon's Square, Little Napoleon. However, Napoleon enjoyed the more popular games of the day such as Whist, Vingt-Un and Piquet, so whether he played those solitaire games or actually invented them is unclear.

Franklin D. Roosevelt was another well known patience player. The game of Roosevelt was named after him, although his favorite solitaire game was Spider solitaire.

In the 1980s, personal computers made solitaire more popular. Microsoft has included the game as part of the Windows operating system since 1990. Players don't need to shuffle and deal the cards for each and every hand, making game play more enjoyable. Whether played on the latest computer or by hand, it is an ideal mind exercise and stress reliever, more popular now than ever before.

Solitaire Cards Susan Kare


The Solitaire Playing Scientist

Here is an interesting article that involves solitaire from The Telegraph newspaper in the UK.

The original Solitaire was a board game that can be traced back to the 17th century and the French court of King Louis XIV.

Played with colored counters, the aim of the game is to capture pieces by jumping them one by one, leaving one survivor on the middle square.

It is not as easy as it first seems.

Alan Turing, the gifted mathematician and computer scientist, famous for breaking the Enigma code during the Second World War explained his solitaire method in a letter written to an eight year old girl in 1953.

Solitaire Cards I/o

Maria Greenbaum was the niece of Turing’s therapist about to set off on a train journey to Switzerland.

'I hope you may get this before you leave, as it will give you something to do in the train. It is just to tell you how to do the solitaire puzzle', wrote Turing.

Without a system, he knew that the game could end up with several pieces that would be impossible to remove because they would be scattered across the board.

As well as providing a general overview about solitaire, Turing listed with the aid of several diagrams, the key moves that would help in finding a solution.

The letter is expected to fetch up to £60,000 ($90,000) when it is auctioned at Bonhams on June 24.

Card Solitaire Games


The Solitaire Playing Statesman

January 2016 has seen the former U.S. secretary of defense release an app for the iPhone and iPad called Churchill Solitaire.

Solitaire Cards 247

83 year old Donald Rumsfeld has been working with a team of developers for the last 2 years to design the game. The story goes that wartime British Prime Minister Winston Churchill taught his version to one of his close friends, a Belgian diplomat named André de Staercke. Thirty years later de Staercke met Rumsfeld and passed on the game.

Free Basic Solitaire Game

The game itself uses 2 decks of cards and 10 columns with a novel Devil's Six feature where those cards can only be moved directly to the victory stack. There are 15 levels to progress through that mirror Churchill's career, starting at military academy and ultimately becoming Prime Minister.


Blog Privacy Policy