Solitaire

Play Solitaire online for free with a calm, fast classic Klondike game. Start immediately in your browser with no signup, no download, and no interruptions.

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Classic Klondike Solitaire

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The card table should open quickly, feel readable, and let you play without negotiating a maze of pop-ups. This site is built around that expectation. The game appears near the top of the page, the controls are available from the first deal, and the board uses large cards so the state of the game is easy to scan on a desktop screen or a modern phone. You can start with the default Draw 1 mode, change to Draw 3 for a stricter challenge, undo a move, ask for a hint, restart the seed, or begin a new random deal.

The homepage focuses on classic solitaire, also known as Klondike. It is the version most players mean when they search for free solitaire, solitaire online, classic solitaire, or play solitaire. The goal is simple to understand: build four foundations from Ace to King by suit. The decisions become interesting because the tableau hides cards, the stock appears in a limited order, and every move changes what will be available later.

This site keeps the game local to the page. There is no external iframe, no required account, no autoplay audio, and no mid-game interstitial. Once the page has loaded, the active logic runs in your browser and stores progress locally. That makes the experience feel immediate and predictable, especially for people who play short sessions during a break or return to the same deal later in the day.

What Is Solitaire?

Solitaire is a family of single-player card games. In everyday English, the word usually refers to Klondike, the seven-column layout that became a standard computer pastime because it is quick to learn and has a satisfying mix of planning, memory, and luck. A traditional deck of fifty-two cards is shuffled into a tableau, a stock, a waste pile, and four foundations. You move cards between these areas while trying to uncover hidden cards and organize each suit in ascending order.

The appeal comes from clear rules and uncertain information. A player can see some cards, infer some risks, and choose between immediate progress and a better long-term position. A move that looks useful may block a face-down card. A move that seems slow may open an empty column for a King and change the entire game. This balance is why browser card play remains popular with beginners, experienced players, and people who want a quiet game that does not demand a long commitment.

Other variants use different structures. Spider uses two decks and builds full descending sequences. FreeCell shows every card from the beginning and rewards exact planning. Pyramid asks you to remove pairs that total thirteen. Mahjong uses tiles instead of playing cards, but it belongs naturally beside these games because it is also a calm solo matching puzzle. This site gives those variants their own pages so each game can have its own rules, controls, FAQ, and internal links.

How to Play Solitaire

Start by looking for cards that reveal hidden tableau cards. Revealing cards is usually more valuable than moving a visible card without changing access. A low card that can move to a foundation is useful, but a move that flips a face-down card often gives you more information and more future choices. Empty columns matter too. In Klondike, only Kings can move into empty tableau columns, so do not open a column unless you have a King available or a strong reason to wait for one.

Solitaire Setup

The tableau has seven columns. The first column receives one card, the second receives two, and the pattern continues until the seventh column receives seven cards. Only the top card in each tableau column is face up at the beginning. The remaining cards form the stock. When you draw, cards move from the stock to the waste. The four foundations start empty and are built by suit from Ace through King.

Objective

The objective is to move every card to the foundations. Each foundation accepts one suit only. A foundation starts with an Ace, then accepts the Two of the same suit, then the Three, and so on until the King. You win when all four foundations contain a complete Ace-to-King sequence.

Basic Rules

Tableau cards build downward by alternating color. A black 7 can be placed on a red 8, and a red Queen can be placed on a black King. You may move a face-up sequence if the cards are already in legal descending alternating order. A face-down tableau card turns face up when every card above it has moved away. The stock can be drawn one card at a time in Draw 1 mode or three cards at a time in Draw 3 mode.

There are two common kinds of legal moves to compare on every turn. A foundation move moves the game toward the final objective, but it may not reveal new information. A tableau move may look less final, but it can uncover hidden cards, create an empty column, or make a buried card reachable from the waste. Good play comes from balancing those goals instead of always choosing the move that feels most obvious.

When a tableau column becomes empty, treat it as a limited resource. In classic Klondike, only a King or a legal sequence starting with a King can move there. If you clear a column without a King ready, you may not gain anything immediately. If you clear it at the right moment, it can let you move a long sequence and reveal several hidden cards across the board.

Draw 1 vs Draw 3 Solitaire

Draw 1 is easier because every stock card becomes available in a more flexible order. If you are learning the game, Draw 1 is the best default. It gives you more chances to recover from imperfect moves and helps you understand how tableau choices affect the foundations. Draw 3 is stricter. You see three cards at a time, but only the top waste card is immediately playable. That means the order of the stock matters more, and a card you need may stay buried until you cycle through the stock again.

Neither mode is the only correct way to play. Draw 1 is better for relaxed sessions and quick wins. Draw 3 is better when you want the familiar classic computer challenge. The homepage lets you switch modes from the controls instead of forcing a separate page before you can begin. Dedicated pages for Klondike Turn 1 and Klondike Turn 3 exist for players who want that exact mode from the first deal.

If you are comparing scores, keep the draw mode consistent. A strong Draw 1 result is not directly comparable to a Draw 3 result because the stock access is different. For casual play, choose the mode that keeps the game enjoyable. For practice, alternate modes and notice how your priorities change when the waste pile becomes less flexible.

Winnable Deals vs Random Deals

A random deal is shuffled from a seed and may or may not be solvable with perfect play. Randomness is part of Klondike, but it can be frustrating when a deal is blocked from the start. A winnable deal should mean something stricter: the seed has been verified by a solver or a trustworthy known solution. This site does not label unverified seeds as winnable. The current game exposes random seedable deals and keeps the winnable seed files empty until solver generation is added.

That distinction matters for trust. Many card sites use “winnable” loosely as a marketing label. A useful game site should be clear about what the mode means. When solver-verified seed lists are added, the game will display the deal type, seed, and difficulty label without pretending that every random shuffle is guaranteed.

Seed display is still useful even before verified deals are added. If you find an interesting random deal, the seed gives you a way to replay it later, compare a different line, or report a bug with enough detail for the position to be reproduced. Restart uses the same seed, while New Game creates a new shuffled deal.

Solitaire Strategy Tips

Prioritize moves that reveal face-down cards. The more hidden cards you uncover, the more reliable your decisions become. Do not rush every card to the foundation automatically; sometimes a low card is needed in the tableau to move another sequence. Use empty columns carefully because a free column is powerful only when it helps place a King or move a long sequence. In Draw 3, pay close attention to the waste order because playing one card can expose another card that was previously blocked.

Undo is not cheating when you are learning. It helps you understand cause and effect. Try a move, watch what it opens, and step back if it clearly weakens the board. Over time you will notice patterns: uncover deep columns first, avoid burying low cards under long stacks, and keep color balance in mind before moving a sequence. The hint system on this site favors productive moves such as revealing hidden cards, opening columns, and moving safe cards to the foundation.

Another useful habit is to inspect columns by depth. A column with many face-down cards is often worth attention because each reveal increases the amount of information on the board. A shallow column may be easier to clear, but clearing it only matters if the empty space can be used. When you have several possible moves, ask which move changes access to hidden cards, waste cards, or Kings.

Do not treat every loss as a mistake. Random deals can be blocked, especially in Draw 3. The goal is to make decisions that preserve options for as long as possible. If a position collapses, restart the same seed and test a different early move. That practice is more useful than cycling through new deals without learning why the previous one failed.

Why Play Solitaire on Solitaire.uk.net?

The site is designed for people who want the game first. The page is static, fast, and focused. Controls remain visible, the board is built with accessible labels, and local settings let you choose large cards, high contrast, left-handed layout, dark mode, reduced animation, tap-to-move, and drag-to-move preferences. Sound is off by default. There is no registration wall, no forced tutorial, no download prompt, and no ad that interrupts an active deal.

The same product logic applies to the rest of the site. Each major variant receives a focused page with rules, strategy, related games, FAQ, canonical metadata, and structured data. The goal is not to create dozens of thin pages that repeat the same paragraph. It is to give players a clear place to play the exact game they searched for, then support that game with useful visible content.

Accessibility is part of that product logic. Cards need readable labels, controls need clear names, and the board should remain usable with larger card settings or higher contrast. The current version includes keyboard shortcuts for common actions and local controls for card size, contrast, motion, and layout. Those details matter because many people return to the same kind of card table repeatedly, not just once.

More Solitaire Games

After classic solitaire, the strongest variants are Spider, FreeCell, Mahjong, and Pyramid. Spider is best if you like long sequencing decisions. FreeCell is best if you prefer full information and careful planning. Mahjong is a tile-matching puzzle with a different rhythm but the same calm solo-game appeal. Pyramid is short, tactical, and built around quick arithmetic pairs. Internal links below take you to the main playable versions and guide pages.

The guide pages support the same cluster without duplicating the homepage. How to Play explains the beginner flow, Setup focuses on the physical layout, Rules clarifies legal moves, and Strategy goes deeper on winning habits. Keeping those topics separate makes the site easier to navigate and reduces cannibalization between closely related searches.

The result is a focused card-game hub: one fast board at the top, then supporting pages for players who want a different challenge or a clearer explanation before their next deal.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this solitaire game free?

Yes. The classic solitaire game on Solitaire.uk.net is free to play in your browser with no signup, no download, and no required account.

What version of solitaire is on the homepage?

The homepage uses classic Klondike Solitaire with seven tableau columns, four foundations, a stock, and a waste pile.

Can I play Draw 1 and Draw 3?

Yes. Use the draw mode control above the board to switch between Draw 1 and Draw 3 during a new or active game.

Does the game save my progress?

The current game, local settings, and local best stats are stored in your browser localStorage so you can continue after reloading the page.

Are the winnable deals verified?

The game uses random seedable deals in the current MVP. Winnable deal labels are reserved for future solver-verified seed lists only.