Klondike: idyutary solitaire

Klondike: idyutary solitaire - Single Player Card Game

About the Game

♥️ Game features: - Move cards by clicking and dragging. - Daily tasks. - The rank system. - Leaderboard. - Cancel the move. - Dealing 1 card each. - Dealing 3 cards each. - 2 simplifiers, +5 simplifiers per ad view. - Timer, moves, points. - Auto completion. - Mute the game sounds. - Detailed statistics. - Selection of background, card shirts. - Relaxing gameplay. - Shopping.

Game Mechanics

A Single Player Card Game is a solitaire‑style mechanic where one player arranges, matches, or sequences cards according to specific rules, with no opponents. Unlike multiplayer card games, the challenge comes from solving a layout puzzle rather than outsmarting others. The most common variant involves building foundation piles in ascending order (Ace to King) by suit, while rearranging a tableau of face‑up and face‑down cards. Core mechanics include draw and discard (pulling from a stock pile), tableau building (alternating colors and descending ranks), and undo moves to backtrack mistakes. Winning requires emptying the tableau or moving all cards to foundations. Other single‑player card puzzles include matching pairs (clearing the board), sequencing by number regardless of suit, or pyramid addition (combining cards that sum to a target value). Some versions add time limits, move counters, or daily challenges for replayability. Unlike action games, solitaire mechanics reward forward planning, pattern recognition, and patience — knowing which moves to delay or which stack to uncover first. The satisfaction comes from turning a chaotic spread into perfect order. Perfect for players who enjoy calm, thoughtful puzzles they can play at their own pace with no pressure.

How to Play

♠️ The goal of the game is to arrange all the cards in four piles in ascending order from ace to king, observing the suit. - You can move the cards by clicking and dragging. - The ace is placed in the "house" first, then 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, jack, queen, king. - Only the king can be placed in an empty cell (not a house). - To place a card on top of another one in the column, it must be of a different color and lower in rank by 1 (for example: you can put a black six on top of a red seven). - You can stack the cards between the columns. - Clicking on the deck opens the next card. - The deck can be used indefinitely.