Cards are dealt face-down into nine (in 36 cards game) or into thirteen (in 52 cards game) columns. The top card of each colomns flips. The cards must be collected by couples (six with six, Dame with Dame). After a face-down card is uncovered it is...

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Lines

Lines 2.1.0

Popular, simple and enthralling logical game. Build vertical, horizontal or diagonal rows from the one-colour balls and its extinct from the field. Three variants of the game board and three variants of the game fishes (balls, fruits, letters) are...

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Harem

Harem 1.1.1.0

Solitaire is described by V. Bakhirev in the book "Russian card player" of the edition of the XIX century. It's played with the card desk without Kings. On the Aces the player lays out, regardless of suit, Sevens, Eights, and so on. He takes the card from...

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Emotion

Emotion 1.1.1.0

The game is played with two 52-card decks, which ought to be dealt out on thirteen open piles. The top cards of each stacks (of the same suit) can be shifted each on other in descending order. When you stop solitaire, then need to lay out the cards of the...

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Hearts

Hearts 1.1.1

The 18th century ancestor of Hearts was called Reverse, because in this card game, you want to lose certain tricks rather than win them. This realization suggests variant of The Tarot of Marseilles, one of the standard patterns for the design of tarot...

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Freecell

Freecell 1.1.1

Only the top (exposed) card of each tableau pile is available for play. It may be moved to a foundation pile, a free cell, or to another tableau pile. Within the tableau, cards are built down in sequence and alternating in color. Any card may be moved...

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Klondike

Klondike 1.1.1.0

The best-known solitaire in the world. Alternate Names: Canfield, Chinaman, Demon, Fascination, Small Triangle. This realization suggests variant of the cards' pack by Pavel Fedotov, an amateur Russian painter of 19th century. The tableau consists of...

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Spider

Spider 1.1.1

Due to the number of cards, and the extensive moving of groups of cards, this is one game that generally plays better on a computer than it does by hand. This realization suggests variant of the cards' pack by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, a Flemish...

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Confusion

Confusion 1.1.1

The player arranges twelve stacks of three face down cards so as to see all three cards. The top card of each stack is considered a free one. It also can be added to another stack if it has the same rank like a top card of the stack and there is a free...

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Chinese Fool

Chinese Fool 1.1.1

The player arranges two stacks of five face down cards each for himself and an opponent. Then he must lays one card face up on each face down card. The remaining cards are shared between players. The lead belongs to the opponent. He can call trumps. The...

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