Solitaire CardGame Description
Here's a breakdown of the basic rules of Solitaire:
Objective: The goal is to move all 52 cards to four "foundation" piles. Each foundation pile is dedicated to one suit (hearts, diamonds, clubs, spades) and must be built in ascending order, starting with the Ace (A) and going up to the King (K) (A, 2, 3, ..., J, Q, K).
Setup: The cards are dealt into seven "tableau" columns. The first column has one card, the second has two, and so on, until the seventh column has seven cards. Only the top card of each column is dealt face up. The remaining cards form the "stock" pile.
Gameplay:
Cards in the tableau can be moved onto other tableau cards if they are of a different color and one rank lower. For example, a black 6 of spades can be placed on a red 7 of hearts.
The top card of a tableau column can be moved to a foundation pile if it follows the suit and rank order (e.g., a 2 of hearts can be placed on an Ace of hearts).
When a face-up card is moved from a tableau column, the face-down card underneath it is turned face up.
Cards are drawn from the stock pile, either one at a time or three at a time (depending on the variation), and placed face up in the "waste" pile. The top card of the waste pile can be moved to a tableau column or a foundation pile. Once the stock pile is empty, the waste pile can be turned over to form a new stock pile.
Winning: You win the game when all cards have been moved to the foundation piles.
Objective: The goal is to move all 52 cards to four "foundation" piles. Each foundation pile is dedicated to one suit (hearts, diamonds, clubs, spades) and must be built in ascending order, starting with the Ace (A) and going up to the King (K) (A, 2, 3, ..., J, Q, K).
Setup: The cards are dealt into seven "tableau" columns. The first column has one card, the second has two, and so on, until the seventh column has seven cards. Only the top card of each column is dealt face up. The remaining cards form the "stock" pile.
Gameplay:
Cards in the tableau can be moved onto other tableau cards if they are of a different color and one rank lower. For example, a black 6 of spades can be placed on a red 7 of hearts.
The top card of a tableau column can be moved to a foundation pile if it follows the suit and rank order (e.g., a 2 of hearts can be placed on an Ace of hearts).
When a face-up card is moved from a tableau column, the face-down card underneath it is turned face up.
Cards are drawn from the stock pile, either one at a time or three at a time (depending on the variation), and placed face up in the "waste" pile. The top card of the waste pile can be moved to a tableau column or a foundation pile. Once the stock pile is empty, the waste pile can be turned over to form a new stock pile.
Winning: You win the game when all cards have been moved to the foundation piles.
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