ScoringĮach card you move to a foundation is worth 50 points. Solitaire is a single-player card game in which you try to arrange all of your cards into foundation piles. When sorting through reserves the first level offers draw 1, the second level is draw 2, and the third level is draw 3. This game has 3 timed levels with the first level offering a 15 minute limit, the second level offering a 12 minute limit, and the third level offering a 9 minute limit. Under these datapoints are 5 control buttons: undo move, pause game, full screen mode, sound effect control, and music control.
Across the top it shows your level number, current score and how much time remaining. The right rail of the game contains the game controls. When the game shifts past turn 1 remembering where key cards (like Aces and Kings) in the reserves are is important for knowing when to lay or lay off in certain situations. On level 2 the reserves are turn 2 and on level 3 they are turn 3. It is also generally best to pull cards from tableau columns with more face down cards under them than shorter stacks if you are choosing betwee two, though sometimes you can consider drawing from the shorter stack and using the move undo button if the card under it is not good.Īs you advance through the levels the turn count on the reserve increases. On the first level the reserves are turn one, so in most cases it makes sense to play cards from the tableau rather than the reserves. You can cycle through the reserves an unlimited number of times. Once a card has been moved to a foundation you can not move it back to the tableau. Only Kings or descending runs of cards starting with a King can be moved to empty columns on the tableau. A single deck of cards is used to deal 28 cards to the tableau across 7 columns, with 24 cards in the reserves.īuild on the tableau in descending order while alternating suit colors, then build up the four suited foundations in acending order starting with the Aces and ending with the Kings.