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  2. Klondike (solitaire) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klondike_(solitaire)

    [9] [10] The earliest rules for the game known as Klondike today appear in the 1907 edition of Hoyle's Games under the name "Seven-Card Klondike". Hoyles calls it a simpler version of "Klondike", also described in the same book, but which turns out to be a gambling version of the game nowadays known as Canfield in the US and Demon elsewhere in ...

  3. Patience (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patience_(game)

    Although the name solitaire became common in North America for this type of game during the 20th century, British games scholar David Parlett notes that there are good reasons for preferring the name 'patience'. Firstly, a patience is a card game, whereas a solitaire is any one-player game, including those played with dominoes or peg and board ...

  4. Pyramid (solitaire) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyramid_(solitaire)

    Pyramid is a patience or solitaire game of the Simple Addition family, where the object is to get all the cards from the pyramid to the foundation. [1]The object of the game is to remove pairs of cards that add up to a total of 13, the equivalent of the highest valued card in the deck, from a pyramid arrangement of 28 cards. [2]

  5. Aces Up - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aces_Up

    Deal four cards in a row face up. If there are two or more cards of the same suit, discard all but the highest-ranked card of that suit. Aces rank high. Repeat step 2 until there are no more pairs of cards with the same suit. Whenever there are any empty spaces, you may choose the top card of another pile to be put into the empty space.

  6. Spider (solitaire) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider_(solitaire)

    The 50 remaining cards can be dealt to the tableau ten at a time when none of the piles are empty. A typical Spider layout requires the use of two decks. The tableau consists of 10 stacks, with 6 cards in the first 4 stacks, with the 6th card face up, and 5 cards in the remaining 6 stacks, with the 5th card face up.

  7. Accordion (card game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accordion_(card_game)

    Accordion is a patience or card solitaire using a single deck of playing cards. It is so named because it looks like accordion pleats, which have to be ironed out. [ 2 ] The object is to compress the entire deck into one pile like an accordion.

  8. Alhambra (card game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alhambra_(card_game)

    Alhambra is a patience or card solitaire game played using two packs of playing cards. Its unusual feature is akin to that of Crazy Quilt : the cards in the reserve are built either on the foundations or onto a waste pile .

  9. Four Seasons (card game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Seasons_(card_game)

    The rules were first published in 1883 by Dick under the name The Four Seasons which used a 3 x 3 card layout, the foundations being the four corners. [4] In 1898, Mary Whitmore Jones published essentially the same game under the name Czarina Patience using an 'exploded' layout in which the four corner cards were moved away from the tableau which now assumed the form of a cross of five cards. [5]

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