<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="yes"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><channel><title>Card &amp; Puzzle on Card &amp; Puzzle Games | Play Free Solitaire &amp; Classic Games</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/</link><description>Recent content in Card &amp; Puzzle on Card &amp; Puzzle Games | Play Free Solitaire &amp; Classic Games</description><generator>Hugo</generator><language>en</language><lastBuildDate>Thu, 11 Jun 2026 12:43:52 -0700</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/index.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><item><title>Golf vs TriPeaks Solitaire</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/golf-vs-tripeaks-solitaire/</link><pubDate>Thu, 11 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/golf-vs-tripeaks-solitaire/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Golf and TriPeaks Solitaire run on the same core mechanic — play any available card that is one rank above or below the top of the waste pile, regardless of suit — but they wrap that mechanic in very different boards. Golf deals 35 cards face-up in seven open columns and gives you a tight 16-draw stock, producing a casual win rate around 65–70%. TriPeaks hides most of its 28-card board under three overlapping peaks, adds streak-based combo scoring, and wins about 85% of the time. TriPeaks is the easier, more forgiving game and the better starting point; Golf is the sharper planning puzzle.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Online vs Physical Jigsaw Puzzles: Which Should You Choose?</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/online-vs-physical-jigsaw-puzzles/</link><pubDate>Thu, 11 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/online-vs-physical-jigsaw-puzzles/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Online and physical jigsaw puzzles complement each other — they do not replace each other, and most people who love the hobby should use both. Online wins decisively on cost (free versus $15–25 per puzzle), space, convenience, image variety, and the ability to adjust difficulty per image. Physical wins on tactile satisfaction, solving together around a table, and time spent away from screens. The right question is not which format is better, but which format fits the session you actually want to have.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Yukon vs Klondike Solitaire</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/yukon-vs-klondike-solitaire/</link><pubDate>Thu, 11 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/yukon-vs-klondike-solitaire/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Yukon and Klondike Solitaire look nearly identical — seven tableau columns, four foundation piles, descending builds in alternating colors — but they play completely differently. Klondike deals 28 cards to the tableau and holds the remaining 24 in a stock pile you draw from during play; Yukon deals all 52 cards at the start and has no stock or waste pile at all. Yukon also lets you move any face-up card along with everything stacked on top of it, even when those cards are not in sequence. Klondike Turn 1 is the easier game — roughly 30–35% casual win rate against Yukon&amp;rsquo;s 25–30% — and the better starting point; Yukon is the more open, more demanding puzzle.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Get the Card &amp; Puzzle App</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/download/</link><pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/download/</guid><description>&lt;h2 id="why-pre-register-on-google-play">Why pre-register on Google Play?&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>Pre-registering takes one tap and costs nothing. Google Play saves your spot and sends you a notification the moment the Card &amp;amp; Puzzle app launches — so you&amp;rsquo;re playing on day one instead of finding out weeks later. It&amp;rsquo;s the easiest way to make sure you don&amp;rsquo;t miss the release.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>When the app arrives, you&amp;rsquo;ll get the same relaxing card games and jigsaw puzzles you already love, in a faster, full-screen experience built for your phone — plus extras you won&amp;rsquo;t find on the website:&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>How Long Does a Game of Solitaire Take?</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/how-long-does-a-game-of-solitaire-take/</link><pubDate>Tue, 26 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/how-long-does-a-game-of-solitaire-take/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>A typical game of solitaire takes about 5 to 15 minutes. The fastest variants — Golf and TriPeaks — usually finish in 2 to 5 minutes, classic Klondike runs about 5 to 15, and longer games like FreeCell or Spider can stretch to 20 to 30 minutes or more. The more familiar you are with a game, the faster you play it.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p>
&lt;p>&amp;ldquo;How long will this take?&amp;rdquo; is a fair question, because solitaire ranges from a two-minute coffee-break game to a twenty-minute thinking session depending entirely on which variant you choose. Here is what to expect from each.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Is FreeCell Always Winnable?</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/is-freecell-always-winnable/</link><pubDate>Tue, 26 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/is-freecell-always-winnable/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Almost. FreeCell is the most solvable solitaire game there is — nearly every random deal can be won with correct play. In the classic set of 32,000 numbered Microsoft deals, exactly one (game #11982) is unsolvable; every other deal in that set has a known solution. At Card &amp;amp; Puzzle, FreeCell deals are winnable by default, so every game you start can be won — and if you lose, there was a path through it you missed.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Which Solitaire Game Should I Play?</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/which-solitaire-game-should-i-play/</link><pubDate>Tue, 26 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/which-solitaire-game-should-i-play/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>The fastest way to choose: if you are new or just want to win, play &lt;a href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/tripeaks-solitaire/">TriPeaks&lt;/a>. If you want a quick game, play &lt;a href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/golf-solitaire/">Golf&lt;/a>. If you want a deep, pure-skill challenge with almost no luck, play &lt;a href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/freecell-solitaire/">FreeCell&lt;/a>. If you want the classic everyone knows, play &lt;a href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/klondike-solitaire/">Klondike&lt;/a>. And if you want the hardest test on the site, play &lt;a href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/spider-solitaire/4-suit/">Spider 4-Suit&lt;/a>.&lt;/strong> The rest of this guide walks through each goal in detail and points you to the right game and difficulty.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Why Do I Keep Losing at Solitaire?</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/why-do-i-keep-losing-at-solitaire/</link><pubDate>Tue, 26 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/why-do-i-keep-losing-at-solitaire/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>If you keep losing at solitaire, the cause is almost always one of three things — and only one of them is about your skill. You may be playing a hard variant (Spider 4-Suit wins only ~5–10% of the time, Klondike Turn 3 ~10–15%), you may be playing random deals where many hands simply cannot be won, or you may be making a few common mistakes like emptying the stock too early and rushing cards to the foundations. Switch to a more forgiving game, play winnable deals, and fix those habits, and your win rate climbs fast.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Jigsaw Puzzle Statistics (2026)</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/jigsaw-statistics/</link><pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/jigsaw-statistics/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Ravensburger North America&amp;rsquo;s U.S. puzzle sales rose 370% year-over-year in the two weeks preceding April 3, 2020&lt;/strong>, with the company moving from a 2019 baseline of roughly 7 puzzles sold per minute in the region to closer to 20 per minute at peak (Filip Francke, CEO Ravensburger NA, CNBC, April 3, 2020). That is the headline number of the third major jigsaw craze in US history. The first two — 1908–09 and 1932–33 — peaked at sales of approximately 6 to 10 million puzzles per week (Anne D. Williams, &lt;em>The Jigsaw Puzzle: Piecing Together a History&lt;/em>). 48% of American adults said they puzzled at least once a year in a January 2019 Ipsos survey for Ravensburger. The largest commercially available jigsaw puzzle today contains 54,000 pieces (Grafika, &lt;em>Travel Around Art!&lt;/em>). The largest jigsaw ever assembled — 551,232 pieces — was completed by 1,600 students in 17 hours in Ho Chi Minh City in September 2011 (Guinness World Records).&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Solitaire Statistics (2026)</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/solitaire-statistics/</link><pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/solitaire-statistics/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Microsoft Solitaire had 35 million monthly active players at its 30th anniversary in 2020&lt;/strong>, with more than 100 million hands played every day — on Microsoft&amp;rsquo;s platform alone. That is the headline number, but it is only one line of a much larger story. 83% of US adults have played solitaire (YouGov, May 2023). The game has been distributed on more than a billion computers (Xbox Wire, May 2019). Klondike is winnable in 81.945% of deals under thoughtful play (Blake &amp;amp; Gent, &lt;em>Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research&lt;/em>, 2026). Peer-reviewed research has linked card-game engagement to reduced dementia risk in seniors (Verghese et al., &lt;em>NEJM&lt;/em>, 2003).&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Why Did Microsoft Include Solitaire in Windows?</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/why-did-microsoft-include-solitaire/</link><pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/why-did-microsoft-include-solitaire/</guid><description>&lt;p>The most-played computer game in history was not designed to be a game. It was designed to teach people how to use a mouse — and its creators never expected anyone to remember it thirty-five years later.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>That is the real story of Microsoft Solitaire. Not a game that happened to ship with Windows, but a deliberate piece of interaction design dressed up as entertainment — and one of the most successful UX training tools ever built, precisely because it never felt like training at all.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Solitaire Glossary</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/solitaire-glossary/</link><pubDate>Sat, 25 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/solitaire-glossary/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>The essential solitaire terms: the &lt;em>tableau&lt;/em> is the main area of columns where you build sequences; the &lt;em>foundations&lt;/em> are the four suit piles you build up from Ace to King to win; the &lt;em>stock&lt;/em> is the face-down draw pile; the &lt;em>waste&lt;/em> (or talon) holds cards drawn from the stock; and &lt;em>free cells&lt;/em> are the open holding slots unique to FreeCell. Full definitions, grouped by topic, follow below.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p>
&lt;p>Solitaire has its own vocabulary — and not knowing it is a quiet tax on every game you play. When a guide says &amp;ldquo;pack cards onto the tableau&amp;rdquo; or &amp;ldquo;vacate a column,&amp;rdquo; you either know what that means and keep reading, or you stop and guess. This glossary removes that friction. Learn the terms once and every strategy guide, every game description, and every scoring explanation becomes immediately clearer.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Pyramid vs TriPeaks Solitaire</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/pyramid-vs-tripeaks-solitaire/</link><pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/pyramid-vs-tripeaks-solitaire/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Pyramid and TriPeaks both use a pyramid layout and a single 52-card deck, but they play nothing alike. Pyramid is a pairing game — remove two exposed cards that add up to 13 — and has a low win rate. TriPeaks is a chaining game — remove any card one rank above or below the waste card — and has a very high win rate (around 85%). TriPeaks is far more beginner-friendly.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Spider Solitaire: 1 Suit vs 2 Suits vs 4 Suits</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/spider-solitaire-suits-explained/</link><pubDate>Sun, 19 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/spider-solitaire-suits-explained/</guid><description>&lt;p>The suit selector in &lt;a href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/spider-solitaire/">Spider Solitaire&lt;/a> is the single most powerful difficulty lever in any mainstream solitaire game. Most games with difficulty settings adjust something cosmetic — fewer cards, more redraws, a forgiving scoring system. Spider&amp;rsquo;s suit tiers change the fundamental mechanical structure of the game. The jump from 1 suit to 4 suits is not incremental. It is transformative.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>I have built and tested all three variants extensively. Here is exactly what changes between them, why those changes matter, and how to decide which tier belongs in your rotation.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>The History of Solitaire</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/history-of-solitaire/</link><pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/history-of-solitaire/</guid><description>&lt;p>Nobody invented solitaire. There is no founding moment, no patent, no genius who sat down and designed the game from scratch. What actually happened is messier and more interesting: a family of card-laying puzzles evolved slowly out of European gaming culture over several centuries, crystallized into recognizable form in the late 1700s, and then — in a move that changed everything — got bundled with a computer operating system in 1990 to teach office workers how to use a mouse.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>How to Choose the Right Jigsaw Puzzle Piece Count</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/jigsaw-puzzle-piece-count-guide/</link><pubDate>Wed, 15 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/jigsaw-puzzle-piece-count-guide/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Which jigsaw piece count to choose: 10–24 pieces suit complete beginners and kids (a few minutes to solve); 36–64 make a relaxed casual solve (roughly 10–25 minutes); 80–200 are the standard hobby range (about 30 minutes to a couple of hours); and 300–400 are a genuine expert challenge. Match the count to your skill level and the time you want to spend.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p>
&lt;p>Piece count is the single biggest factor in how a jigsaw puzzle feels to solve. Choose too low and it is over before you settle in. Choose too high and you are staring at 100 nearly identical blue pieces wondering why you thought this would be relaxing. The right piece count is the one that matches your current skill level and the time you want to invest — and that sweet spot is different for every player.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>FreeCell vs Klondike Solitaire</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/freecell-vs-klondike-solitaire/</link><pubDate>Mon, 13 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/freecell-vs-klondike-solitaire/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>FreeCell and Klondike share the same deck and the same Ace-to-King foundations, but FreeCell deals every card face-up and adds four free cells for temporarily holding cards — making it a near-pure skill puzzle that is solvable in almost every deal. Klondike keeps most cards hidden and depends far more on the luck of the draw. FreeCell rewards planning; Klondike rewards adaptation.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p>
&lt;p>Klondike is the game everyone has played. It shipped with Windows in 1990, taught an entire generation to use a mouse, and became the default meaning of the word &amp;ldquo;solitaire.&amp;rdquo; FreeCell arrived two years later — quieter, stranger, and in many ways more interesting. Same deck, same alternating-color sequences, same goal of building four foundation piles from Ace to King. Fundamentally different experiences.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Are Jigsaw Puzzles Good for Your Brain?</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/are-jigsaw-puzzles-good-for-your-brain/</link><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/are-jigsaw-puzzles-good-for-your-brain/</guid><description>&lt;p>The short answer is yes — and unlike some of the more optimistic claims about puzzle games and cognitive health, this one is supported by real research. Jigsaw puzzles engage multiple cognitive systems simultaneously in a way that few other leisure activities match. They are not a miracle brain-training program, and I would be skeptical of anyone selling them as one, but the evidence for genuine cognitive benefits is consistent and grounded.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Is Solitaire Good for Your Brain?</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/is-solitaire-good-for-your-brain/</link><pubDate>Fri, 10 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/is-solitaire-good-for-your-brain/</guid><description>&lt;p>The short answer is yes — but not for the reasons most clickbait articles claim. You will not find me telling you that 20 minutes of TriPeaks a day will rewire your hippocampus. What I can tell you, after spending years building these games and playing them obsessively, is that solitaire genuinely exercises several cognitive systems, some variants do it far more rigorously than others, and the evidence base for the benefits — while not dramatic — is real and consistent.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Jigsaw Puzzle Tips and Strategy</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/jigsaw-puzzle-tips-and-strategy/</link><pubDate>Thu, 09 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/jigsaw-puzzle-tips-and-strategy/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>The fastest way to get better at jigsaw puzzles is to sort before you assemble (edges first, then by color and pattern), build recognizable sections instead of working only from the border inward, and learn to read piece shapes to narrow your candidates. For online puzzles, lean on sorting trays and reference-image zoom to replace the physical sorting you&amp;rsquo;d do on a table.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p>
&lt;p>Most jigsaw puzzle advice falls into two categories: obvious things you already know (&amp;ldquo;start with the border&amp;rdquo;) and vague encouragements that do not change how you actually solve (&amp;ldquo;be patient and have fun&amp;rdquo;). Neither is useful once you have completed a few puzzles and want to get meaningfully better.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Solitaire Draw 1 vs Draw 3</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/draw-1-vs-draw-3-solitaire/</link><pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/draw-1-vs-draw-3-solitaire/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Draw 1 (Turn 1) Klondike flips one stock card at a time and wins roughly 30–35% of games; Draw 3 (Turn 3) flips three at once but lets you play only the top card, cutting win rates to about 10–15% and demanding deeper planning. Play Draw 1 first to learn the game, and switch to Draw 3 when you want a stiffer challenge.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p>
&lt;p>&amp;ldquo;Should I play Draw 1 or Draw 3?&amp;rdquo; is the most common question new Klondike players ask after they have played a few games and noticed the setting. It sounds like a minor configuration choice — the same game, just with a different number of cards flipped at once. The reality is that Draw 1 and Draw 3 are fundamentally different games built on the same chassis. The choice shapes everything: how often you win, how deeply you need to plan, how long each game runs, and whether the stock pile feels like an ally or an obstacle.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Best Jigsaw Puzzles for Beginners</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/best-jigsaw-puzzles-for-beginners/</link><pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/best-jigsaw-puzzles-for-beginners/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>The best jigsaw puzzles for beginners start small — around 24 pieces — with a clear, high-contrast image, then scale up gradually through 36, 50, and 64 toward 100+ as your confidence grows. Favor images with distinct regions and colors (animals, food, landmarks) over uniform skies or abstract patterns.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p>
&lt;p>The biggest mistake new jigsaw puzzlers make is starting with a puzzle that is too large. Not because large puzzles are inherently bad — they are great — but because a 400-piece puzzle when you have never done a 36-piece one is like running a half marathon on your first day of exercise. You will not finish, you will not enjoy it, and you will conclude that jigsaw puzzles are not for you. They are for you. The entry point was wrong.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>How Is Solitaire Scored?</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/how-is-solitaire-scored/</link><pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/how-is-solitaire-scored/</guid><description>&lt;p>There is no single solitaire scoring system. That surprises people who assume they know how solitaire is scored because they have played one version of it. Klondike — the game that shipped with Windows — uses a points formula involving foundation moves and a time bonus. Vegas Klondike replaces all of that with a dollar-based gambling ledger. Spider starts at 500 and counts down. TriPeaks rewards streaks. Golf rewards speed. Pyramid rewards the value of cards you match.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Free Online Jigsaw Puzzles Are Here</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/free-online-jigsaw-puzzles/</link><pubDate>Fri, 03 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/free-online-jigsaw-puzzles/</guid><description>&lt;p>Card &amp;amp; Puzzle was always meant to be exactly what the name says — a home for card games and puzzle games. We launched with eight solitaire games, each one built from scratch with the goal of being the best free version of that game on the internet. Solitaire was first, but it was never meant to be the whole story.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>Now the puzzle side is here. We have &lt;a href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/jigsaw-puzzle/">free online jigsaw puzzles&lt;/a>. Seven image categories. Twelve piece counts from 9 to 400 pieces. A new &lt;a href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/jigsaw-puzzle/daily/">daily puzzle&lt;/a> every single day. New images added regularly. And the same design philosophy that drove the solitaire games: no forced signups, no locked content behind a paywall. Just puzzles.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Klondike vs Spider Solitaire</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/klondike-vs-spider-solitaire/</link><pubDate>Wed, 01 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/klondike-vs-spider-solitaire/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Klondike uses one 52-card deck and builds four Ace-to-King foundations by alternating color; Spider uses two decks (104 cards) and builds same-suit runs from King down to Ace right in the tableau. Klondike is the faster, easier game and the better starting point; Spider is harder — dramatically so at 4 suits.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p>
&lt;p>Klondike and Spider are the two most-played solitaire games in the world — and they play almost nothing alike. They share the same ancestry (a single player, a shuffled deck, a goal of ordered card placement) but diverge immediately on nearly every structural and strategic dimension. Different deck counts, different column layouts, different movement rules, different win conditions, and dramatically different difficulty profiles.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Is Every Game of Solitaire Winnable?</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/is-every-solitaire-game-winnable/</link><pubDate>Sun, 29 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/is-every-solitaire-game-winnable/</guid><description>&lt;p>The short answer is no — and the reasons why are more interesting than you might expect.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>Whether a given solitaire deal is winnable is not just a matter of playing well. Some games have deals baked into the shuffle that are mathematically impossible to solve, full stop. Others are theoretically winnable in nearly every configuration but require planning depth that most players never reach. A few sit somewhere in between, where luck and skill interact in ways that even researchers have struggled to fully model.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Solitaire Tips and Strategy</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/solitaire-tips-and-strategy/</link><pubDate>Thu, 26 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/solitaire-tips-and-strategy/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>To win more solitaire games: uncover face-down cards before making any cosmetic move, send a card to the foundation only when it can no longer help the tableau, empty a column early to create a flexible working space, and plan two or three moves ahead instead of taking the first legal one. The priority order shifts by variant — Klondike, Spider, FreeCell, and TriPeaks each reward a different core habit, covered below.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Best Solitaire Games for Beginners</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/best-solitaire-for-beginners/</link><pubDate>Mon, 23 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/best-solitaire-for-beginners/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>The best solitaire game for beginners is TriPeaks — it has the highest win rate of any common variant (around 85%) and the simplest rule set. A natural learning path runs from there through Golf, Klondike (Turn 1), and Spider 1-Suit, up to FreeCell, with each game building a skill the next one needs. Save Spider 4-Suit, Yukon, and Pyramid for later.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p>
&lt;p>The worst way to start with solitaire is to load up Spider 4-Suit on day one. The win rate for new players is somewhere below 5%. You will lose ten games in a row before understanding why any of them went wrong, quit out of frustration, and walk away thinking solitaire is not for you. This is a shame, because the problem was not solitaire — it was the entry point.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>How to Solve Jigsaw Puzzles — Tips &amp; Strategies for Every Skill Level</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/jigsaw-puzzle/guide/</link><pubDate>Mon, 23 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/jigsaw-puzzle/guide/</guid><description>&lt;div class="section content-card">
&lt;h2 id="choosing-the-right-puzzle">Choosing the Right Puzzle&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>The single biggest factor in your enjoyment is matching the puzzle to your skill level. Too easy and it&amp;rsquo;s boring; too hard and it&amp;rsquo;s frustrating.&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="piece-count-by-skill-level">Piece Count by Skill Level&lt;/h3>
&lt;p>For online jigsaw puzzles, piece counts work a bit differently than physical puzzles since pieces are typically larger on screen:&lt;/p>
&lt;ul>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Beginner (9–25 pieces):&lt;/strong> Perfect for learning the basics. You can complete these in 5–10 minutes and build confidence with the interface.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Easy (36–49 pieces):&lt;/strong> A satisfying challenge without frustration. Great for a quick break.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Medium (64–81 pieces):&lt;/strong> The sweet spot for most players. Enough complexity to be engaging, completable in 15–30 minutes.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Hard (100–144 pieces):&lt;/strong> Requires genuine strategy and patience. Plan for 30–60 minutes.&lt;/li>
&lt;li>&lt;strong>Expert (196–400 pieces):&lt;/strong> A serious challenge that rewards systematic approach and persistence. The 400-piece version can take 1–2 hours.&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;h3 id="what-makes-an-image-easy-or-hard">What Makes an Image Easy or Hard?&lt;/h3>
&lt;p>An image with many distinct colors and clear subjects (animals, buildings, flowers) is easier than one with large uniform areas. Landscapes with big stretches of sky or water are deceptively difficult because many pieces look nearly identical.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>How to Play Solitaire</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/how-to-play-solitaire/</link><pubDate>Fri, 20 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/blog/how-to-play-solitaire/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>To play solitaire (Klondike, the most common version): deal 28 cards into seven tableau columns — one card in the first column up to seven in the last, with only the top card of each face up — and leave the remaining 24 cards in the stock pile. Move tableau cards in descending rank and alternating color (a red 9 on a black 10), and build four foundation piles up from Ace to King by suit. You win when all 52 cards reach the foundations.&lt;/strong> Full step-by-step rules are below, followed by the eight other solitaire variants you can play at Card &amp;amp; Puzzle.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Klondike Solitaire Turn 1</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/klondike-solitaire/turn-1/</link><pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/klondike-solitaire/turn-1/</guid><description>&lt;div id="games-markdown">
 &lt;div class="section">
 &lt;h1 id="page-title">Klondike Solitaire Turn 1&lt;/h1>
 &lt;div class="games-markdown-underline">&lt;/div>
 &lt;h2>The Classic, One-Card-at-a-Time Experience&lt;/h2>
 &lt;p>Turn 1 is what most people picture the moment you say the word Solitaire. When I think back to all those hours I spent playing on my first computer in the early 90s, it was always this mode — one card at a time, the full deck visible as you work through it, that satisfying click as every card finally finds its place. There is something deeply calming about knowing nothing is hidden from you. The challenge is not finding the cards; it is figuring out the right order to use them.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Klondike Solitaire Turn 3</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/klondike-solitaire/turn-3/</link><pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/klondike-solitaire/turn-3/</guid><description>&lt;div id="games-markdown">
 &lt;div class="section">
 &lt;h1 id="page-title">Klondike Solitaire Turn 3&lt;/h1>
 &lt;div class="games-markdown-underline">&lt;/div>
 &lt;h2>The Strategic Hard Mode of Classic Solitaire&lt;/h2>
 &lt;p>I remember the first time I switched from Turn 1 to Turn 3 — I thought I understood Klondike, and then the game humbled me immediately. Cards I needed were buried two deep in the waste pile. A perfectly set-up tableau move fell apart because the right stock card would not surface for three more cycles. The frustration was real, but so was the satisfaction the first time I worked through all that complexity and won. Turn 3 is a different game. It rewards patience and planning in a way that Turn 1 simply does not need to.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Solitaire Games Ranked by Difficulty</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/solitaire-difficulty-ranking/</link><pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/solitaire-difficulty-ranking/</guid><description>&lt;p>Not all solitaire games are created equal. &lt;a href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/tripeaks-solitaire/">TriPeaks Solitaire&lt;/a> has a casual win rate around 85%. &lt;a href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/spider-solitaire/4-suit/">Spider 4-Suit&lt;/a> sits below 10%. Between those extremes lie nine other games, each with a distinct difficulty personality shaped by hidden information, move constraints, luck weighting, and strategic depth.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>After building and playing all of these games for years, here&amp;rsquo;s how I&amp;rsquo;d rank them — and more importantly, why each one sits where it does.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>This ranking covers every solitaire game available at Card &amp;amp; Puzzle, ordered from easiest to hardest. Win rates reflect casual play — an experienced player will beat these figures in the forgiving games and may struggle to reach them in the harder ones.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Spider Solitaire 1 Suit</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/spider-solitaire/1-suit/</link><pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/spider-solitaire/1-suit/</guid><description>&lt;div id="games-markdown">
 &lt;div class="section">
 &lt;h1 id="page-title">Spider Solitaire 1 Suit&lt;/h1>
 &lt;div class="games-markdown-underline">&lt;/div>
 &lt;h2>The Cleanest Version of a Great Game&lt;/h2>
 &lt;p>I still fire up 1 Suit Spider when I want a quick win before a meeting. There's something satisfying about watching those completed runs fly off the board — and knowing you built them cleanly. I started here when I first got serious about Spider, and it taught me more about the game's core logic than hours of struggling through the harder variants ever did.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Spider Solitaire 2 Suits</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/spider-solitaire/2-suit/</link><pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/spider-solitaire/2-suit/</guid><description>&lt;div id="games-markdown">
 &lt;div class="section">
 &lt;h1 id="page-title">Spider Solitaire 2 Suits&lt;/h1>
 &lt;div class="games-markdown-underline">&lt;/div>
 &lt;h2>Where Spider Strategy Really Begins&lt;/h2>
 &lt;p>2 Suit is where I spend most of my Spider time. It hits that sweet spot between relaxing and challenging — hard enough that lazy play gets punished, but forgiving enough that a well-played game usually ends in a win. I moved here from 1 Suit when I got tired of the same patterns repeating, and I have never felt the need to live in 4 Suit to get a satisfying game.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Spider Solitaire 4 Suits</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/spider-solitaire/4-suit/</link><pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/spider-solitaire/4-suit/</guid><description>&lt;div id="games-markdown">
 &lt;div class="section">
 &lt;h1 id="page-title">Spider Solitaire 4 Suits&lt;/h1>
 &lt;div class="games-markdown-underline">&lt;/div>
 &lt;h2>Spider at Its Most Demanding&lt;/h2>
 &lt;p>I'll be honest — 4 Suit Spider humbles me regularly. My win rate hovers around 15%, and I've been playing for years. Some sessions I go on a run and feel like I've cracked the code. Other sessions I lose eight straight and have no idea what hit me. That unpredictability is a big part of why I keep coming back.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Types of Solitaire Games</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/types-of-solitaire/</link><pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/types-of-solitaire/</guid><description>&lt;p>Solitaire is not a single game — it is a genre. There are hundreds of documented solitaire variants, and the term covers everything from gentle card-sorting puzzles to brutal combinatorial challenges where expert players still lose more often than they win. What these games share is a single-player format and a deck of cards. Beyond that, they vary widely in structure, strategy, and difficulty.&lt;/p>
&lt;p>I&amp;rsquo;ve spent years building and playing all of these variants, and each one genuinely scratches a different itch. This guide covers 12 well-known types of solitaire games, organized by their core mechanic. Eight of them you can &lt;a href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/solitaire-games/">play free online at Card &amp;amp; Puzzle&lt;/a> right now. The remaining four round out the picture and give context for where the popular variants sit within the broader solitaire landscape.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>How to Play Yukon Solitaire – Rules &amp; Strategy</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/yukon-solitaire/guide/</link><pubDate>Tue, 22 Apr 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/yukon-solitaire/guide/</guid><description>&lt;div class="table-of-contents">
 &lt;h2>Table of Contents&lt;/h2>
 &lt;nav id="TableOfContents">
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#what-is-yukon-solitaire">What Is Yukon Solitaire?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#objective-of-yukon-solitaire">Objective of Yukon Solitaire&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#complete-rules-for-yukon-solitaire">Complete Rules for Yukon Solitaire&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#setup">Setup&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#card-movement-rules">Card Movement Rules&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#uncovering-cards">Uncovering Cards&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#winning-conditions">Winning Conditions&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#scoring-system">Scoring System&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#move-points">Move Points&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#time-bonus">Time Bonus&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#winning-strategy-tips-for-yukon-solitaire">Winning Strategy Tips for Yukon Solitaire&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#1-expose-facedown-cards-early">1. Expose Face‑Down Cards Early&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#2-move-aces-to-foundations-quickly">2. Move Aces to Foundations Quickly&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#3-create-empty-columns-strategically">3. Create Empty Columns Strategically&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#4-think-multiple-moves-ahead">4. Think Multiple Moves Ahead&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#5-balance-tableau-management-with-foundation-building">5. Balance Tableau Management with Foundation Building&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#6-use-the-stepping-stone-technique">6. Use the &amp;ldquo;Stepping Stone&amp;rdquo; Technique&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#7-recognize-when-to-backtrack">7. Recognize When to Backtrack&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#8-maintain-color-balance">8. Maintain Color Balance&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#advanced-tactics">Advanced Tactics&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#card-counting-and-distribution">Card Counting and Distribution&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#the-deep-dive-approach">The &amp;ldquo;Deep Dive&amp;rdquo; Approach&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#the-king-relocation-problem">The King Relocation Problem&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#strategic-scenarios">Strategic Scenarios&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#probabilities-and-win-rates">Probabilities and Win Rates&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#common-mistakes-and-fixes">Common Mistakes and Fixes&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#historical-context-and-trivia">Historical Context and Trivia&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#frequently-asked-questions">Frequently Asked Questions&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#how-does-the-any-visible-card-can-move-rule-work-in-practice">How does the &amp;ldquo;any visible card can move&amp;rdquo; rule work in practice?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#are-there-any-restrictions-on-moving-cards-in-yukon">Are there any restrictions on moving cards in Yukon?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#how-do-i-improve-my-win-rate-in-yukon">How do I improve my win rate in Yukon?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#can-i-move-cards-back-from-the-foundations-to-the-tableau">Can I move cards back from the foundations to the tableau?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#whats-the-difference-between-yukon-and-russian-solitaire">What&amp;rsquo;s the difference between Yukon and Russian Solitaire?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#is-yukon-more-like-klondike-or-freecell">Is Yukon more like Klondike or FreeCell?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#master-moves-expert-tips">Master Moves: Expert Tips&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
&lt;/nav>
 &lt;/div>
&lt;h2 id="what-is-yukon-solitaire">What Is Yukon Solitaire?&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>Yukon Solitaire is the bold, free‑spirited cousin in the solitaire family. While it shares DNA with Klondike—building tableau piles in descending order with alternating colors—Yukon breaks the most fundamental rule of card movement: &lt;strong>any visible card can be moved regardless of what&amp;rsquo;s on top of it&lt;/strong>, dragging along its entire stack like a mountaineer with a trailing rope team.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>How to Play TriPeaks Solitaire – Rules &amp; Strategy</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/tripeaks-solitaire/guide/</link><pubDate>Sat, 19 Apr 2025 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/tripeaks-solitaire/guide/</guid><description>&lt;div class="table-of-contents">
 &lt;h2>Table of Contents&lt;/h2>
 &lt;nav id="TableOfContents">
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#why-tripeaks-a-quick-origin-story">Why TriPeaks? A Quick Origin Story&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#objective">Objective&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#setup">Setup &lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#basic-moves">Basic Moves &lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#uncovering-cards">Uncovering Cards&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#winning">Winning &lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#scoring-system">Scoring System &lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#1-streak-points">1. Streak Points&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#2-peak-bonuses">2. Peak Bonuses&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#3-time-bonus">3. Time Bonus&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#4-perfect-score-snapshot">4. Perfect Score Snapshot&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#core-strategy--tactics">Core Strategy &amp;amp; Tactics&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#1-target-the-valleys-first">1. Target the Valleys First&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#2-build--bank-streaks">2. Build &amp;amp; Bank Streaks&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#3-use-pivot-pairs">3. Use “Pivot Pairs”&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#4-bet-on-future-flexibility">4. Bet on Future Flexibility&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#5-controlled-stock-draws">5. Controlled Stock Draws&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#6-clear-peaks-for-bonus--board-space">6. Clear Peaks for Bonus &amp;amp; Board Space&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#advanced-concepts">Advanced Concepts&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#streak-math--expected-value">Streak Math &amp;amp; Expected Value&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#stockcounting">Stock‑Counting&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#wastereset-trick">Waste‑Reset Trick&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#dealing-with-dead-cards">Dealing with Dead Cards&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#common-mistakes--fixes">Common Mistakes &amp;amp; Fixes&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#probabilities--performance-benchmarks">Probabilities &amp;amp; Performance Benchmarks&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#frequently-asked-questions-indepth">Frequently Asked Questions (In‑Depth)&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#can-i-play-cards-from-different-peaks-in-one-streak">Can I play cards from different peaks in one streak?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#do-suits-matter-at-all">Do suits matter at all?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#why-does-my-streak-reset-when-i-click-stock">Why does my streak reset when I click stock?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#are-there-unwinnable-deals">Are there unwinnable deals?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#fastest-way-to-improve">Fastest way to improve?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#ready-to-scale-the-three-summits">Ready to Scale the Three Summits?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
&lt;/nav>
 &lt;/div>
&lt;h2 id="why-tripeaks-a-quick-origin-story">Why TriPeaks? A Quick Origin Story&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>TriPeaks sits at the crossroads of Golf and Pyramid Solitaire. Created by Robert Hogue in 1989, it first shipped in Microsoft&amp;rsquo;s Windows Entertainment Pack 3 and was later included in the Microsoft Solitaire Collection, where it reached an entirely new audience. Unlike Golf, where all cards start face‑up, TriPeaks hides 21 cards under 7 face‑up “summits,” requiring forward planning to expose them. The three‑peak tableau gives players clear sub‑goals, and the ever‑growing &lt;strong>streak counter&lt;/strong> turns every run into a dopamine‑rich mini‑speed‑run.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>How to Play Addiction 7 Solitaire – Rules &amp; Strategy</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/addiction7-solitaire/guide/</link><pubDate>Thu, 05 Dec 2024 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/addiction7-solitaire/guide/</guid><description>&lt;div class="table-of-contents">
 &lt;h2>Table of Contents&lt;/h2>
 &lt;nav id="TableOfContents">
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#what-is-addiction-7-solitaire">What is Addiction 7 Solitaire?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#objective-of-addiction-7-solitaire">Objective of Addiction 7 Solitaire&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#complete-rules-for-addiction-7-solitaire">Complete Rules for Addiction 7 Solitaire&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#setup">Setup&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#gap-placement-rules">Gap Placement Rules&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#building-sequences">Building Sequences&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#shuffle-strategy">Shuffle Mechanism&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#scoring-system-in-addiction-7-solitaire">Scoring System in Addiction 7 Solitaire&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#move-based-scoring">Move-Based Scoring&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#time-bonus-calculation">Time Bonus Calculation&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#scoring-strategy">Scoring Strategy&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#advanced-strategy-guide">Advanced Strategy Guide&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#1-opening-analysis">1. Opening Analysis&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#2-gap-management-principles">2. Gap Management Principles&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#3-sequence-building-tactics">3. Sequence Building Tactics&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#4-advanced-shuffle-timing">4. Advanced Shuffle Timing&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#5-endgame-techniques">5. Endgame Techniques&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#common-mistakes-and-solutions">Common Mistakes and Solutions&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#1-premature-sequence-completion">1. &lt;strong>Premature Sequence Completion&lt;/strong>&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#2-shuffle-hesitation">2. &lt;strong>Shuffle Hesitation&lt;/strong>&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#3-ignoring-cross-dependencies">3. &lt;strong>Ignoring Cross-Dependencies&lt;/strong>&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#4-gap-waste">4. &lt;strong>Gap Waste&lt;/strong>&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#5-poor-row-assignment">5. &lt;strong>Poor Row Assignment&lt;/strong>&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#difficulty-progression-and-win-rates">Difficulty Progression and Win Rates&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#beginner-level-0-25-games-played">Beginner Level (0-25 games played)&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#intermediate-level-25-100-games-played">Intermediate Level (25-100 games played)&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#advanced-level-100-games-played">Advanced Level (100+ games played)&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#expert-level-benchmarks">Expert Level Benchmarks&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#psychological-aspects-and-mental-skills">Psychological Aspects and Mental Skills&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#pattern-recognition">Pattern Recognition&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#strategic-planning">Strategic Planning&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#decision-making-under-constraints">Decision Making Under Constraints&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#tips-for-different-skill-levels">Tips for Different Skill Levels&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#for-new-players">For New Players&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#for-intermediate-players">For Intermediate Players&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#for-advanced-players">For Advanced Players&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#mathematical-insights">Mathematical Insights&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#probability-considerations">Probability Considerations&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#optimal-move-calculations">Optimal Move Calculations&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#frequently-asked-questions">Frequently Asked Questions&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#is-every-game-of-addiction-7-winnable">Is every game of Addiction 7 winnable?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#whats-the-best-strategy-when-im-completely-stuck">What&amp;rsquo;s the best strategy when I&amp;rsquo;m completely stuck?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#should-i-always-try-to-complete-one-row-at-a-time">Should I always try to complete one row at a time?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#how-do-i-improve-my-win-rate">How do I improve my win rate?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#whats-a-good-target-score-for-a-winning-game">What&amp;rsquo;s a good target score for a winning game?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#how-does-addiction-7-compare-to-other-solitaire-games-in-difficulty">How does Addiction 7 compare to other solitaire games in difficulty?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#history-and-variants">History and Variants&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#origins-of-addiction-solitaire">Origins of Addiction Solitaire&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#why-the-7-variant">Why the &amp;ldquo;7&amp;rdquo; Variant?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#other-related-games">Other Related Games&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
&lt;/nav>
 &lt;/div>
&lt;h2 id="what-is-addiction-7-solitaire">What is Addiction 7 Solitaire?&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>Addiction 7 Solitaire is a strategic twist on the classic Addiction (also known as Gaps or Montana) Solitaire. This variant uses only cards Ace through Seven from all four suits, creating a compact 28-card puzzle that demands precise planning and flawless execution. Unlike traditional solitaire games that rely partly on luck, Addiction 7 is a pure strategy game where every move must be calculated and every gap utilized efficiently.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>How to Play FreeCell Solitaire – Rules &amp; Strategy</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/freecell-solitaire/guide/</link><pubDate>Fri, 19 Apr 2024 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/freecell-solitaire/guide/</guid><description>&lt;div class="table-of-contents">
 &lt;h2>Table of Contents&lt;/h2>
 &lt;nav id="TableOfContents">
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#what-is-freecellsolitaire">What is FreeCell Solitaire?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#objective-of-freecellsolitaire">Objective of FreeCell Solitaire&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#complete-rules-for-freecell-solitaire">Complete Rules for FreeCell Solitaire&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#setup">Setup &lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#card-movement-rules">Card Movement Rules&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#moving-multiple-cards-efficiently">Moving Multiple Cards Efficiently&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#scoring-systems-in-freecell-solitaire">Scoring Systems in FreeCell Solitaire&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#movepoints-twophase-list">Move Points (two‑phase list)&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#time-bonus">Time Bonus&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#winning-strategy-tips-for-freecell-solitaire">Winning Strategy Tips for FreeCell Solitaire&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#1-empty-a-column-early">1. Empty a Column Early&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#2-keep-freecells-free">2. Keep Free Cells Free&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#3-build-foundations-evenly">3. Build Foundations Evenly&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#4-think-in-reverse">4. Think in Reverse&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#5-prioritise-lowvalue-blockers">5. Prioritise Low‑Value Blockers&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#6-reserve-kings-for-empty-columns">6. Reserve Kings for Empty Columns&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#7-learn-surfacing">7. Learn “Surfacing”&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#advanced-tactics">Advanced Tactics&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#cycle-foundations">Cycle Foundations&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#tempo-vs-economy">Tempo vs. Economy&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#deal-recognition">Deal Recognition&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#common-mistakes-and-fixes">Common Mistakes (and Fixes)&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#probabilities-and-statistics">Probabilities and Statistics&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#history-and-trivia">History and Trivia&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#beginner-faq-extras">Beginner FAQ (extras)&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#why-does-the-game-refuse-my-long-move">Why does the game refuse my long move?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#whats-a-good-win-rate">What’s a “good” win rate?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#how-do-i-improve-fastest">How do I improve fastest?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#sources">Sources&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
&lt;/nav>
 &lt;/div>
&lt;h2 id="what-is-freecellsolitaire">What is FreeCell Solitaire?&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>FreeCell is the “open‑book” cousin of Klondike. Every card is face‑up, so you’re never blindsided by a bad flip. Instead, four small &lt;strong>Free Cells&lt;/strong> act as temporary shelves. By shuffling cards between tableau columns, Free Cells, and Foundations, you untangle the deck and build each suit from Ace to King. Because very few deals are unwinnable, the game is a pure test of foresight and resource management. One careless move can doom an otherwise solvable deal; one inspired sequence can unlock the entire puzzle.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>How to Play Golf Solitaire – Rules &amp; Strategy</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/golf-solitaire/guide/</link><pubDate>Fri, 19 Apr 2024 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/golf-solitaire/guide/</guid><description>&lt;div class="table-of-contents">
 &lt;h2>Table of Contents&lt;/h2>
 &lt;nav id="TableOfContents">
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#what-is-golf-solitaire">What Is Golf Solitaire?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#objective-of-golf-solitaire">Objective of Golf Solitaire&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#complete-rules-for-golf-solitaire">Complete Rules for Golf Solitaire&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#setup">Setup &lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#making-moves">Making Moves &lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#stock">Using the Stock &lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#scoring-system">Winning, Losing, and Scoring &lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#scoring-system-1">Scoring System&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#1-card-points">1. Card Points&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#2-time-bonus">2. Time Bonus&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#3-perfect-score">3. Perfect Score&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#strategy-guide">Strategy Guide&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#1-target-flexible-runs-early">1. Target Flexible Runs Early&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#2-weigh-up-vs-down">2. Weigh “Up” vs. “Down”&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#3-collapse-columns">3. Collapse Columns&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#4-respect-the-ace">4. Respect the Ace&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#5-deck-memory">5. Deck Memory&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#6-controlled-stock-flips">6. Controlled Stock Flips&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#7-pace-for-the-bonus">7. Pace for the Bonus&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#8-endgame-tuck-moves">8. End‑Game “Tuck” Moves&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#common-mistakes-and-fixes">Common Mistakes (and Fixes)&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#advanced-insights">Advanced Insights&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#probability-snapshot">Probability Snapshot&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#meta-chain-planning">“Meta” Chain Planning&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#scoring-math--linear-bonus-formula">Scoring Math – Linear Bonus Formula&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#history-and-trivia">History and Trivia&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#frequently-asked-questions">Frequently Asked Questions&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#why-is-it-called-golf">Why is it called “Golf”?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#can-kings-play-on-aces">Can Kings play on Aces?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#how-do-i-beat-a-dead-deal">How do I beat a “dead” deal?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#whats-a-respectable-score">What’s a respectable score?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#sources">Sources&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
&lt;/nav>
 &lt;/div>
&lt;h2 id="what-is-golf-solitaire">What Is Golf Solitaire?&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>Golf Solitaire (sometimes called &lt;strong>One‑Up‑One‑Down&lt;/strong>) is a speed‑oriented single‑deck solitaire. Instead of building foundations, you “chip away” at a tableau of 35 face‑up cards by playing cards one rank above or below the waste pile. Aces are wild connectors—they sit snugly between Kings and Twos. Clear the tableau, beat the clock, and post a perfect 500‑point round.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>How to Play Klondike Solitaire – Rules &amp; Strategy</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/klondike-solitaire/guide/</link><pubDate>Fri, 19 Apr 2024 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/klondike-solitaire/guide/</guid><description>&lt;div class="table-of-contents">
 &lt;h2>Table of Contents&lt;/h2>
 &lt;nav id="TableOfContents">
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#what-is-klondike-solitaire">What is Klondike Solitaire?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#objective-of-klondike-solitaire">Objective of Klondike Solitaire&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#complete-rules-for-klondike-solitaire">Complete Rules for Klondike Solitaire&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#setup">Setup&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#card-movement-rules">Card Movement Rules&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#variations-of-klondike">Variations of Klondike&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#turn-1-vs-turn-3">Turn 1 vs. Turn 3&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#scoring-systems-in-klondike-solitaire">Scoring Systems in Klondike Solitaire&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#standard-scoring">Standard Scoring&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#winning-strategy-tips-for-klondike-solitaire">Winning Strategy Tips for Klondike Solitaire&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#1-prioritize-uncovering-face-down-cards">1. Prioritize Uncovering Face-Down Cards&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#2-create-empty-tableau-spaces">2. Create Empty Tableau Spaces&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#3-dont-rush-to-move-cards-to-foundations">3. Don&amp;rsquo;t Rush to Move Cards to Foundations&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#4-look-ahead-when-moving-sequences">4. Look Ahead When Moving Sequences&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#5-maintain-color-balance-in-foundations">5. Maintain Color Balance in Foundations&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#6-when-to-break-the-rules">6. When to Break the Rules&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#7-planning-multiple-moves-ahead">7. Planning Multiple Moves Ahead&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#probabilities-and-statistics">Probabilities and Statistics&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#win-rates">Win Rates&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#unwinnable-deals">Unwinnable Deals&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#fascinating-mathematical-facts">Fascinating Mathematical Facts&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#history-and-trivia">History and Trivia&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#frequently-asked-questions">Frequently Asked Questions&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#is-every-game-of-klondike-winnable">Is every game of Klondike winnable?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#whats-the-difference-between-klondike-and-regular-solitaire">What&amp;rsquo;s the difference between Klondike and regular Solitaire?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#whats-the-best-strategy-when-im-stuck">What&amp;rsquo;s the best strategy when I&amp;rsquo;m stuck?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#how-long-does-an-average-game-take">How long does an average game take?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#is-klondike-a-game-of-skill-or-luck">Is Klondike a game of skill or luck?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#why-do-i-sometimes-get-stuck-with-just-a-few-cards-left">Why do I sometimes get stuck with just a few cards left?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#are-there-any-professional-klondike-players">Are there any professional Klondike players?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#sources">Sources&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
&lt;/nav>
 &lt;/div>
&lt;h2 id="what-is-klondike-solitaire">What is Klondike Solitaire?&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>Klondike is the classic solitaire card game that most people think of when they hear &amp;ldquo;solitaire.&amp;rdquo; If you&amp;rsquo;ve ever used a Windows PC, you&amp;rsquo;ve probably played the Microsoft version. It&amp;rsquo;s a single-player game where you sort cards into four foundation piles by suit, starting with Aces and building up to Kings. The game is known for being easy to learn but challenging to win consistently.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>How to Play Pyramid Solitaire – Rules &amp; Strategy</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/pyramid-solitaire/guide/</link><pubDate>Fri, 19 Apr 2024 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/pyramid-solitaire/guide/</guid><description>&lt;div class="table-of-contents">
 &lt;h2>Table of Contents&lt;/h2>
 &lt;nav id="TableOfContents">
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#what-ispyramidsolitaire">What Is Pyramid Solitaire?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#objective">Objective&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#complete-rules-for-pyramid-solitaire">Complete Rules for Pyramid Solitaire&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#setup">Setup &lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#pairing-rules">Pairing Rules &lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#stock-waste">Stock &amp;amp; Waste Mechanics &lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#game-end">Game End&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#scoring-system">Scoring System &lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#1-cardpoints">1. Card Points&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#2-timebonus">2. Time Bonus&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#3-perfect-score">3. Perfect Score&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#strategy-guide">Strategy Guide&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#1-clear-from-the-base-up">1. Clear from the Base Up&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#2-snap-up-kings-immediately">2. Snap Up Kings Immediately&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#3-expose-highleverage-cards">3. Expose High‑Leverage Cards&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#4-delay-dualvalue-cards">4. Delay “Dual‑Value” Cards&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#5-scan-before-you-draw">5. Scan Before You Draw&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#6-think-in-pair-chains">6. Think in Pair Chains&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#7-reserve-aces-and-twos">7. Reserve Aces and Twos&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#8-stockmanagement-trick">8. Stock‑Management Trick&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#advanced-play--probabilities">Advanced Play &amp;amp; Probabilities&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#dealing-odds">Dealing Odds&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#doublelift-concept">“Double‑Lift” Concept&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#common-mistakes-and-how-to-dodge-them">Common Mistakes (and How to Dodge Them)&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#history--trivia">History &amp;amp; Trivia&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#frequently-asked-questions">Frequently Asked Questions&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#can-i-pair-two-stock-cards">Can I pair two stock cards?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#is-redeal-ever-allowed">Is redeal ever allowed?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#whats-a-softlock">What’s a “soft‑lock”?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#how-do-i-push-past-a-20-win-rate">How do I push past a 20 % win rate?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#sources">Sources&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
&lt;/nav>
 &lt;/div>
&lt;h2 id="what-ispyramidsolitaire">What Is Pyramid Solitaire?&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>Pyramid Solitaire replaces the suit‑sorting of Klondike with a quickfire math puzzle. Twenty‑eight cards form a pyramid—each card partly covers two beneath it. Remove exposed cards in &lt;strong>pairs that total 13&lt;/strong> (King = 13 leaves solo) until the structure crumbles. Stock and waste piles give you extra pairing options, but once your arithmetic runs dry, the round ends.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>How to Play Spider Solitaire – Rules &amp; Strategy</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/spider-solitaire/guide/</link><pubDate>Fri, 19 Apr 2024 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/spider-solitaire/guide/</guid><description>&lt;div class="table-of-contents">
 &lt;h2>Table of Contents&lt;/h2>
 &lt;nav id="TableOfContents">
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#what-is-spider-solitaire">What Is Spider Solitaire?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#objective">Objective&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#complete-rules-for-spider-solitaire">Complete Rules for Spider Solitaire&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#setup">Setup&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#building-sequences">Building Sequences&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#revealing-and-empty-columns">Revealing and Empty Columns&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#stock">Stock Deals&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#winning-and-scoring">Completing Runs &amp;amp; Winning&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#scoring-system">Scoring System&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#starting-score">Starting Score&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#point-adjustments">Point Adjustments&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#time-bonus">Time Bonus&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#strategy-guide">Strategy Guide&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#1-manufacture-empty-columns-early">1. Manufacture Empty Columns Early&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#2-build-samesuit-whenever-possible">2. Build Same‑Suit Whenever Possible&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#3-flip-facedown-cards-above-all">3. Flip Face‑Down Cards Above All&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#4-delay-stock-deals">4. Delay Stock Deals&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#5-reserve-low-cards">5. Reserve Low Cards&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#6-use-the-suit-ladder">6. Use the &amp;ldquo;Suit Ladder&amp;rdquo;&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#7-undo-intelligently">7. Undo Intelligently&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#8-endgame-compression">8. End‑Game Compression&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#advanced-tactics">Advanced Tactics&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#suit-segregation">Suit Segregation&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#deep-stock-management">Deep Stock Management&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#empty-column-discipline">Empty Column Discipline&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#strategic-scenarios">Strategic Scenarios&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#difficulty-progression">Difficulty Progression&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#one-suit-mode">One-Suit Mode&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#two-suit-mode">Two-Suit Mode&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#four-suit-mode">Four-Suit Mode&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#probabilities--performance-benchmarks">Probabilities &amp;amp; Performance Benchmarks&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#pattern-recognition--card-distribution">Pattern Recognition &amp;amp; Card Distribution&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#common-pitfalls-and-fixes">Common Pitfalls (and Fixes)&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#psychology-of-spider">Psychology of Spider&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#history--trivia">History &amp;amp; Trivia&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#beginner-faq-highlights">Beginner FAQ Highlights&lt;/a>
 &lt;ul>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#why-cant-i-deal-from-stock">Why can&amp;rsquo;t I deal from stock?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#whats-the-fastest-way-to-improve">What&amp;rsquo;s the fastest way to improve?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#is-there-ever-a-guaranteed-unwinnable-game">Is there ever a guaranteed unwinnable game?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#do-the-remaining-50-cards-in-stock-follow-any-pattern">Do the remaining 50 cards in stock follow any pattern?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#should-i-always-complete-a-run-when-possible">Should I always complete a run when possible?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#does-the-variant-i-play-affect-my-solitaire-skill">Does the variant I play affect my solitaire skill?&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;/li>
 &lt;li>&lt;a href="#sources">Sources&lt;/a>&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
&lt;/nav>
 &lt;/div>
&lt;h2 id="what-is-spider-solitaire">What Is Spider Solitaire?&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>Spider Solitaire is the heavyweight of single‑player card games. Played with &lt;strong>104 cards&lt;/strong> (two standard decks) and ten tableau columns, it demands layered planning: build descending runs, juggle suits, and time your stock deals to perfection. The game offers three tiers:&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>About Card &amp; Puzzle</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/about/</link><pubDate>Thu, 18 Apr 2024 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/about/</guid><description>&lt;p>Welcome to CardAndPuzzle.com — I&amp;rsquo;m Lemon Crate Nick, and I built this site because I wanted a place to play card games that looked good, felt smooth, and didn&amp;rsquo;t bombard you with pop-ups or require an account just to play a round of Solitaire.&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="my-background">My Background&lt;/h3>
&lt;p>I&amp;rsquo;ve been making games for over 25 years. I started back when mobile gaming meant tiny screens, painfully slow processors, and figuring out how to make something fun within extreme hardware limits. Over the years I&amp;rsquo;ve shipped games across every major mobile platform, watching the technology evolve from basic feature phones to the devices we carry today.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Contact Us</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/contact/</link><pubDate>Thu, 18 Apr 2024 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/contact/</guid><description>&lt;div class="contact-container">
 &lt;div class="contact-info-column">
 &lt;div class="contact-info">
 &lt;h2>Need Assistance or Have Questions?&lt;/h2>
 &lt;p>At Card &amp; Puzzle™, we value your feedback and are committed to providing excellent support for all our games.&lt;/p>
 &lt;p>For faster support, you can also check our &lt;a href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/faq/">FAQ section&lt;/a> for answers to common questions.&lt;/p>
 &lt;h3>When reporting a bug, please include:&lt;/h3>
 &lt;ul class="report-details">
 &lt;li>Game title&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>Device and browser you're using&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>Clear description of the issue&lt;/li>
 &lt;li>Steps to reproduce the problem (if possible)&lt;/li>
 &lt;/ul>
 &lt;p>We strive to respond to all inquiries within 24-48 hours during business days.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Frequently Asked Questions</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/faq/</link><pubDate>Thu, 18 Apr 2024 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/faq/</guid><description>&lt;h3 id="what-types-of-games-can-i-play-here">What types of games can I play here?&lt;/h3>
&lt;p>We offer a wide variety of 100% free card, puzzle, and casual games designed to entertain and challenge. You&amp;rsquo;ll find popular classics like Solitaire, Free Cell, and Spider Solitaire along with unique puzzle games for a fresh experience.&lt;/p>
&lt;h3 id="do-i-need-to-download-anything-to-play">Do I need to download anything to play?&lt;/h3>
&lt;p>No downloads are required. All of our browser-based games run directly in your web browser, making it easy to jump into the action without any hassle or installation.&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Privacy Policy</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/privacy/</link><pubDate>Thu, 18 Apr 2024 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/privacy/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Last Updated:&lt;/strong> February 15, 2026&lt;/p>
&lt;p>This Privacy Policy describes how &lt;strong>Lemon Crate Studio LLC&lt;/strong> (&amp;ldquo;we&amp;rdquo;, &amp;ldquo;us&amp;rdquo;, or &amp;ldquo;our&amp;rdquo;) collects, uses, and discloses information about you when you use our website (&lt;strong>&lt;a href="https://cardandpuzzle.com">https://cardandpuzzle.com&lt;/a>&lt;/strong>) and our mobile applications (collectively, the &amp;ldquo;Services&amp;rdquo;).&lt;/p>
&lt;p>We are the &lt;strong>Data Controller&lt;/strong> for your information.&lt;/p>
&lt;h2 id="1-information-we-collect">1. Information We Collect&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>We collect information to provide a seamless gaming experience across web and mobile. We categorize data collection by the source:&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Terms of Service</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/terms-of-service/</link><pubDate>Thu, 18 Apr 2024 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/terms-of-service/</guid><description>&lt;p>&lt;strong>Last Updated:&lt;/strong> February 13, 2026&lt;/p>
&lt;h2 id="1-agreement-to-terms">1. Agreement to Terms&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>These Terms of Service (&amp;ldquo;Terms&amp;rdquo;) constitute a legally binding agreement made between you, whether personally or on behalf of an entity (&amp;ldquo;you&amp;rdquo;) and &lt;strong>Lemon Crate Studio LLC&lt;/strong> (&amp;ldquo;Company,&amp;rdquo; &amp;ldquo;we,&amp;rdquo; &amp;ldquo;us,&amp;rdquo; or &amp;ldquo;our&amp;rdquo;), concerning your access to and use of the &lt;strong>&lt;a href="https://cardandpuzzle.com">https://cardandpuzzle.com&lt;/a>&lt;/strong> website and the &lt;strong>Card &amp;amp; Puzzle&lt;/strong> mobile application (collectively, the &amp;ldquo;Service&amp;rdquo;).&lt;/p>
&lt;p>By accessing or using the Service, you agree that you have read, understood, and accept all of these Terms. &lt;strong>IF YOU DO NOT AGREE WITH ALL OF THESE TERMS, THEN YOU ARE EXPRESSLY PROHIBITED FROM USING THE SERVICE AND YOU MUST DISCONTINUE USE IMMEDIATELY.&lt;/strong>&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Subscription Confirmed</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/newsletter-confirmed/</link><pubDate>Mon, 01 Jan 0001 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/newsletter-confirmed/</guid><description>&lt;h1 id="thank-you-for-subscribing">Thank You for Subscribing!&lt;/h1>
&lt;p>Your subscription to the Card &amp;amp; Puzzle newsletter has been successfully confirmed.&lt;/p>
&lt;h2 id="what-to-expect">What to Expect&lt;/h2>
&lt;p>You&amp;rsquo;ll receive:&lt;/p>
&lt;ul>
&lt;li>Notifications about new games&lt;/li>
&lt;li>Updates about site features&lt;/li>
&lt;li>Occasional news from Lemon Crate Studio LLC&lt;/li>
&lt;/ul>
&lt;p>&lt;a href="https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/">Return to Homepage&lt;/a>&lt;/p></description></item><item><title>Themes</title><link>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/themes/</link><pubDate>Mon, 01 Jan 0001 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate><guid>https://cb674f9d.cardandpuzzle-website.pages.dev/themes/</guid><description/></item></channel></rss>