Spider Solitaire 4 Suits

Play Spider Solitaire 4 Suits online for free, the advanced Spider version using all four suits.

Free online game

Spider Solitaire 4 Suits

No signup. No download. No mid-game ads.

Loading Spider Solitaire 4 Suits...

Play Spider Solitaire 4 Suits Online for Free

Spider Solitaire 4 Suits is the advanced form of Spider. It uses all four suits and two decks, creating a dense puzzle where every stock deal can reshape the board. Winning requires patience, empty-column control, and careful separation of suits.

What Is Spider Solitaire 4 Suits?

The objective is the same as every Spider game: clear eight complete King-to-Ace runs. The difficulty comes from suit purity. A descending stack of mixed suits may look organized, but it cannot be removed until the sequence is rebuilt into one suit.

How to Play Spider Solitaire 4 Suits

Move same-suit descending sequences whenever possible. Use empty columns to rearrange partial runs. Reveal face-down cards before chasing a long visible stack. When no productive move remains, deal a row from the stock, but remember that standard rules require all columns to be filled first.

Spider Solitaire 4 Suits Rules

Ten tableau columns hold the main board. The stock deals one card to each column. Complete same-suit King-to-Ace runs leave the board. The game is won after all eight runs clear.

Strategy Tips

Build by suit early. A same-suit five-card run is often more valuable than a longer mixed run. Avoid burying low cards under unrelated suits because those low cards often finish completed sequences. Before dealing, use hints and undo to test whether a tableau reorganization reveals a hidden card.

Similar Solitaire Games

Spider 2 Suits is the natural step down from this page. FreeCell is also a strong planning game, but it removes hidden information and stock deals.

Why 4 Suits Is Demanding

Four suits make every mixed build expensive. A descending stack of different suits can help temporarily, but it cannot clear. To remove a full run, every card from King to Ace must match suit. That means the board has two goals at once: reveal hidden cards and keep suit order clean enough to finish runs later.

The difficulty is not only the number of suits. It is the cost of fixing mistakes. A mixed stack that was harmless in an easier mode may require several empty-column moves to repair here. The stronger habit is to build by suit early, even when a mixed move looks convenient.

Opening Priorities

Reveal hidden cards first, but prefer reveals that keep suit order intact. If a mixed move reveals a card and a same-suit move does not, the mixed move may still be correct. If both moves reveal the same amount, choose the same-suit build. Small suit-preserving choices compound over the whole game.

Identify promising high-card anchors. A suited King or Queen with matching lower cards nearby can become a future completed run. Avoid burying those anchors under unrelated cards unless the move opens a major hidden-card route.

Empty Column Planning

Empty columns are essential in the advanced mode. They let you split mixed stacks, move partial runs, and rebuild suits. Filling an empty column without a plan is one of the fastest ways to lose flexibility. A good empty-column move should create a clear follow-up.

When a column opens, pause before filling it. Can it separate a mixed stack? Can it hold a King-led suited run? Can it uncover a face-down card in a deeper column? The best use may be temporary, moving a sequence out and then moving it again after another card is revealed.

Stock Deals in Advanced Play

Stock deals are dangerous because they add ten cards across the board. Before dealing, reduce disorder as much as possible. Connect same-suit sequences, use empty columns, and reveal every reachable hidden card. A board that looks merely untidy before a deal can become nearly locked afterward.

If standard rules block a deal because a column is empty, choose the fill carefully. Do not sacrifice the empty space for a low-value card. Fill it with a King-led run or the sequence that leaves the cleanest structure after the new row arrives.

Common 4 Suits Mistakes

The common mistake is accepting too many mixed stacks early. Another is chasing one long run while ignoring hidden cards in other columns. Players also deal rows because no perfect move remains, even though several small cleanup moves are still available.

Strong play is patient and conservative. Preserve same-suit runs, use undo to test risky rearrangements, and treat each stock deal as a major event. A slow position with clean suits is often healthier than a fast position with tall mixed piles.

Advanced Practice

A useful practice method is to replay one seed several times. In the first attempt, focus only on revealing hidden cards. In the second, focus on preserving same-suit structure. In the third, compare the two and decide where mixing suits was actually necessary. This teaches the tradeoff more clearly than jumping between random deals.

When the board feels locked, look for one empty-column plan rather than one immediate move. The plan may require moving a partial run, splitting a mixed stack, then rebuilding a clean sequence. If any step has no destination, use undo before the board loses more space.

Controls for Difficult Boards

Hints can identify a legal path, but advanced play still depends on judgment. Undo and Redo are more important here than in easier modes because a single mixed build can create several turns of repair work. Full screen helps keep all ten columns visible, and high contrast makes suits easier to distinguish.

Seed display is especially valuable in the hardest mode. A long deal may fail because one early stock row was dealt too soon or one empty column was filled with the wrong run. Restarting the seed makes that decision testable instead of vague.

Use reduced animation when studying difficult boards. The less the board moves visually, the easier it is to compare suit order, hidden-card depth, and the value of an empty column before dealing again.

The hardest boards are usually solved by preserving flexibility. If a move removes the last workspace, it should reveal something important immediately.

Otherwise, undo and look for a cleaner suited sequence or a safer way to delay the stock deal.

Pause first.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Spider Solitaire 4 Suits the hardest Spider mode?

Yes. It uses all four suits, so completed runs require much more careful sorting.

Should I make mixed-suit stacks?

Use mixed stacks only when they reveal hidden cards or create space. Same-suit sequences are much more valuable.

Why are empty columns important?

Empty columns let you temporarily move runs, split mixed stacks, and rebuild same-suit sequences.