Solitaire Games deliver relaxing, brain-teasing card puzzles with multiple rule sets and layouts. Choose your favorite variant, practice smart moves, and enjoy the satisfying moment when every stack locks into place. Play as part of our collection of Free Online Games
Build foundation piles from Ace upward while organizing the tableau in alternating colors. Easy to learn, endlessly replayable.
Clear the tableau by assembling full King-to-Ace sequences of the same suit. More planning, deeper challenge for fans of Puzzle Games
All cards are face up and solvable with careful sequencing. Use four free cells to stage intermediate moves, a great fit for thoughtful play in Strategy Games
Drag, reveal, and stack. Beneath the simplicity sits satisfying strategy that rewards foresight.
Fast restarts, quick shuffles, and clear win conditions make it perfect for short breaks or longer sessions.
Practice card ordering, lane management, and resource timing to raise your win rate across variants.
โถ๏ธ Select a variant such as Klondike, Spider, or FreeCell
โฌ๏ธ Move cards to build sequences in descending order on the tableau
โฃ๏ธ Reveal and free hidden cards to unlock new moves
๐๏ธ Use the stockpile when you run out of options
๐ Goal: build the foundation piles by suit from Ace to King
Prioritize moves that uncover face-down cards and open new lanes.
Maintain at least one empty column to reposition long sequences.
Before drawing from the stockpile, scan for higher-value rearrangements on the board.
In FreeCell and Spider, stage cards briefly only if it enables a larger clear.
Tableau: main columns where you build descending sequences
Foundation: four suit piles built from Ace to King
Stock/Waste: draw pile and the face-up discard from draws
A family of single-player card puzzles with different rules and layouts, including Klondike, Spider, and FreeCell.
Klondike is the most approachable. FreeCell is transparent and strategic, while Spider offers the toughest challenge.
Most versions are untimed. Some modes add optional timers or score bonuses for speed.
Many implementations allow undos. Use them to learn better sequencing and improve consistency.
They suit Puzzle Games for logic and pattern finding, and Strategy Games for planning several turns ahead.