how to play Solitaire game in computer
Solitaire: how to play
Windows Solitaire is one of the
most-played computer games in the world. It's based on the most popular variant
of solitaire, Klondike.
The object
Build four stacks of cards, one for each suit, in ascending order,
from ace to king.
The table
Windows solitaire is played with
a single deck of 52 cards. The game begins with 28 cards arranged into seven
columns. The first column contains one card, the second has two cards, and so
on. The top card in each column is face up, the rest are face down.
Four Home stacks are positioned at the
upper-right corner. This is where you build the piles needed to win.
How to play
Each Home stack must start with an ace. If you don't have any,
you'll have to move cards between columns until you uncover one.
You can't move cards between columns at random, however. Columns
must be built in descending order, from king to ace. So you can place a 10 on a
jack, but not on a 3.
As an added twist, cards in columns must also alternate red and
black.
You aren't limited to moving single cards. You can also move
sequentially organized runs of cards between columns.
Just click the deepest card in the run and drag them all to another column.
If you run out of moves, you'll have to draw more cards by
clicking the deck in the upper-left corner. If the deck runs out, click its
outline on the table to reshuffle it.
You can move a card to the Home stack either by dragging it or by
double-clicking it.
Scoring
Under Standard scoring, you receive five points for moving a card
from the deck to a column, and 10 points for each card added to a Home
stack.
If a game takes more than 30 seconds, you also receive bonus
points based on the time it takes to finish. The bonus formula: 700,000 divided
by total game time in seconds. Thus, the highest possible Standard score is
24,113!
(To change the scoring system, click the Game menu and then click Options.)
Hints and tips
Ask for hints. Stuck? Press
H to have Windows light up the cards you
should play next. For beginners, it's also a good way to learn the game.
Keep runs even. Runs are the
stacks of visible cards you create in the columns. Don't let any one run get too
far ahead of the others if you can help it. Having one particularly long run
makes it difficult to make other moves.
Leave no card unturned. The
more face-down cards in a column, the better it is to work at revealing those
cards first. It will increase your odds of making plays.
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