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Double Solitaire is a two-player variant on the best-known patience or solitaire card game called Klondike. [1] While it is mostly referred to as Double Solitaire, [2] it is sometimes called Double Klondike (a name which also doubles as an alternate designation of the single-player solitaire game Gargantua). Games with more players (Triple ...
Blockade is a patience or card solitaire game that uses two packs of 52 playing cards each. As in most patiences, the object is to play the cards into foundations. [1] The play is reminiscent of the popular game, Forty Thieves, but with 12 piles instead of 10.
Deuces or Twos is a patience or card solitaire game of English origin which is played with two packs of playing cards. It is so called because each foundation starts with a Deuce, or Two. It belongs to a family of card games that includes Busy Aces, which is derived in turn from Napoleon at St Helena (aka Forty Thieves).
The cards on the two columns to the left and right of the foundations are available for play and a card can built onto a foundation or to another card on the tableau (the two columns). Building on the tableau is down regardless of suit and any space is filled either by the top card of the stock or the top card of the wastepile. Cards are moved ...
Solitaire: Golf. Build the foundation up or down, regardless of the suit. Win by removing all cards from the columns. By Masque Publishing
This image is a screenshot of the solitaire game "Double Canfield". Double Canfield has eight foundations that build up in suit from rank of first card dealt, e.g. Q♣, K♣, A♣, 2♣... There are five depots in the tableau of one card each that build down in opposite colors, e.g. 2 ♥, A ♥, K ♥, Q ♥...
Babette (card game) Backbone (card game) Batsford (card game) Beetle (solitaire) Big Ben (card game) Blockade (card game) Box Kite (card game) British Blockade; British Constitution (card game) British Square
Contradance (also known as cotillion) is a solitaire card game which is played with two decks of playing cards. [1] It is probably so called because when the game is won, it shows the king and the queen of each suit about to do a dance, the cotillion being a country dance from the 18th century.