Russian Solitaire
Solitaire Play solitaire! Solitaire is also known as بازی یک نفره in Persian, and सॉलिटेयर in Hindi. There are various solitaire games in the world of solitaire. Solitaire is an amazing game and all it's versions. Free solitaire game on your phone. Play solitaire which is one of the best free solitaire games. Russian Solitaire is a complex game that is hard to win. Play Russian Solitaire, a Solitaire game which is very similar to Yukon Solitaire. Solitaire King has all popular and classic Solitaire games with fun gameplay and clever features. Under the charm of the Russian Solitaire, your task is to move all cards to 4 foundations by suit from A to K. When the game starts, cards will be dealt to 7 tableau piles.
Da Comrade. Here at russian-solitaire.com, you don't play cards; cardsplay you.
Russian Solitaire is basically Yukon Solitaire with one important rulechange that makes Russian a much more difficult game: here you'll bebuilding by suit instead of by alternating color.
Russian Solitaire actually shares some similarities to the classicsolitaire game Klondike. This is especially evident when you play byhand. So let's talk about that first.
playing Russian Solitaire by hand
For this game, you will need a full card deck (minus any Jokers). Firstof course is to completely shuffle the deck. For the next part, it'sexactly identitcal to Klondike:
You are going to build 7 columns. Start by placing one card face up incolumn 1, and then 6 cards face down in the remaining columns. Next, youwill place one card face up on column 2, then 5 more cards face down incolumns 3-7. You repeat this pattern until you finally place your lastface up card on column 7.
This part is what is identical to Klondike Solitaire. At this point inKlondike, your remaining cards would be used for the stock pile.
In Yukon and Russian, there is no stock; what would've become the stockpile will instead go directly on the tableau (the 7 columns).
So here's where the instructions differ from Klondike.
For your remaining cards, add 4 cards face up to all columns exceptfor the first column (e.g., 4 face up cards to columns 2, 3, 4, etc). Ifyou have dealt things correctly, you will have no remaining cards inyour hands.
So to reiterate, here is what things will look like for Russian/Yukon ifeverything went well:* first column: 0 face down cards, 1 face up card* second: 1 face down, 5 face up* third: 2 face down, 5 face up * fourth: 3 face down, 5 face up* fifth: 4 face down, 5 face up* sixth: 5 face down, 5 face up* seventh: 6 face down, 5 face up
Russian Solitaire rules
If you're playing with Yukon rules, the rules are somewhat similar toKlondike. If you're playing with Russian rules, prepare yourself for amuch more hardcore experience.
In both games, the object is to move all cards to the 4 foundationpiles. Rules for this are identical to Klondike: foundations are builtup (ascending) from Ace to King and by suit.
On the tableau (the columns), stacks are built down (descending) fromKing to Ace. For Yukon, you play like Klondike by building down byalternate color. In Russian, you build down by suit.
However, where the rules for both games vary greatly from Klondike is inwhat cards are allowed to be dragged. In Klondike, you may only drageither the top most card or a 'deep' card that's part of a valid stack.This part is still true for Yukon and Russian, but they have a newoption: you can drag any card regardless of its position in a pile solong as its target card is the topmost card.
Russian Solitaire Card Game
Let me give you some examples of valid moves:
In this first example, you've got a 3 of spades as the topmost card onone of your columns. And to clarify, visually, that 3 of spades is atthe bottom of a pile, but it is stacked on top of all the rest of thecards in its column, hence why it's known as the top-most card.
In this scenario, we're looking at the 3 of spades as the target card.Now if this were Klondike, your only valid move would be to find a red 2that was also the top most card of its column. In Yukon (which alsoplays by alternating color), this would also be a valid move, but here'swhere it gets crazy: if you find a red 2 anywhere in a stack, you canmake the move. In Russian, since it's by suit, you will need to find a 2of spades anywhere to make the move. So let's say you find that 2 card,but beneath it there's a 7, a King, a 3, and an 8. It doesn't reallymatter what. What you'll do is pick up that stack of cards starting withthe 2 and ending with the 8 and put all of them on that 3 of spades wetalked about.
Russian Solitaire Bliss
Something that is also different from Klondike is that Aces can be movedonto 2s on the tableau (in Klondike, you'd normally immediately move theAce to the foundations). This happens when your Ace card is not thetop most card in its column. In this case, you may then move it to anylegal 2 within the tableau regardless of what cards are below the Ace(legal of course being determined by whether you're playing with Yukonor Russian rules). And of course, once that Ace is the top-most card,then you would immediately move it to a foundation pile.
In this game, given how many non-sequential cards you can drag at once,you may find you end up with some very long columns. You'll need to havea good eye to spot all of your valid moves at this point. We suggest youstart by examining target cards one at a time (remember, the validtarget cards are only ever the top-most card in a column), and thenexamine every other column to see if a valid card exists somewhereinside of a stack. Oh and to clarify, columns can't be broken apart andmoved onto themselves.
When you get a blank spot, any King may be moved onto that free pile.And we really do mean any because remember, it doesn't matter what cardsmay or may not be beneath that King card.
Like in lots of solitaire games, the ultimate objective is to move allof your cards to the 4 foundation piles. Just like in Klondike, the 4foundation piles are built up (ascending) by suit, so from Ace to King.When you have fully built all 4 foundation piles, you win the game.
And let me tell you, when you play and actually win Russian Solitaire,that is something to be proud of because the odds of winning this cardgame are somewhere around 1 in 30.
Whether you win or lose, we salute you Comrade!
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