Scorpion Solitaire is a classic card game where players build descending sequences of cards in suit, aiming to move all cards to the foundation piles. Easy version allows any card to be put in empty Tableau pile. (rules)
Scorpion SolitaireScorpion Solitaire is a classic card game where players build descending sequences of cards in suit, aiming to move all cards to the foundation piles. (rules)
Spider SolitaireSpider Solitaire is played with eight (!) decks of 52 cards, from which only the spade suit is chosen, making a total of 104 cards. The goal of Spider Solitaire is to arrange all cards into eight foundation piles, building them down in suit from King to Ace. In this variant you play with cards of one suit only – spades. (rules)
Spider Solitaire, 2 SuitsThis variant of Spider solitaire is similar to the Classic Spider, while you play with cards of two suits, spades and hearts, still making a total of 104 cards. It elevates game complexity and makes your wins more valuable. (rules)
Spider Solitaire, 4 SuitsThis variant of Spider solitaire is the hardest one and is still similar to the Classic Spider, while you play with all four suits, making a total of 104 cards. This further increases the difficulty of the game and makes your victories disproportionately more valuable. (rules)
Spiderette SolitaireSpiderette is a single-deck version of the popular Spider Solitaire. Played with 52 cards, the objective is to build four sequences of cards, each running from King down to Ace, within the tableau. Like its larger counterpart, cards are built down in descending rank regardless of suit, but only sequences of the same suit can be moved as a unit. When a complete King-to-Ace sequence of the same... (rules)
Spiderette Solitaire, 2 SuitsSpiderette 2 Suits increases the complexity by using two suits (e.g., Spades and Hearts) from two 52-card decks. The goal remains to build King-to-Ace sequences of a single suit, which are then removed. While cards can still be built down in descending rank regardless of suit, the increased presence of only two suits makes it more challenging to form pure-suit sequences, requiring more careful... (rules)
Spiderette Solitaire, 4 SuitsSpiderette 4 Suits is the most difficult variation, played with all four suits from a single 52-card deck (each card appearing once). This version presents the ultimate challenge of Spiderette, as forming the required four King-to-Ace sequences of a single suit becomes significantly harder due to the numerous suit conflicts. Strategic thinking and meticulous planning are crucial, as mixing suits... (rules)