Classic games
Solitaire (Klondike)
A familiar patience game: build up on the four foundations, build down on the table in alternating red and black. Not gambling or real money.
Play in the browser
Keyboard · optional sound (toggle in game)
Klondike: build down in columns (alternating colors), up on foundations by suit. Space flips the stock. Turn 3 draws three cards; only the top waste card plays. Double-click a playable card to send it to a foundation. Hint and Undo work like on Solitaired.
Cards · Patience · Free
Klondike solitaire
in your browser
Stock, waste, four foundations, and seven columns — with Turn 1 / Turn 3, hint, undo, and optional sound. No real-money play.
Jump to the gameHow to play
- Draw from the stock to flip cards to the waste. When the stock is empty, click it to recycle the waste back. Space does the same. Use Turn 1 or Turn 3 to set how many cards you flip at once (only the top waste card plays).
- Move cards: tap a face-up card (or the waste) to select, then tap a foundation or tableau column to move. Valid tableau builds run down, one rank, alternating red and black. Foundations build up A→K by suit.
- Empty columns only take a King (or a valid stack with a King on the contact). Double-click a column bottom or waste top to try auto-sending to a foundation when the rules allow.
- Hint shows a legal move; Undo steps back. Toggle Sound and use New game anytime. Time, Moves, and Restocks are for your own stats only — not gambling.
- Win by placing all 52 cards on the foundations. There is no stake, no payout, and no account.
What “solitaire” usually means on a computer
When people say “solitaire” on a PC, they almost always mean Klondike: seven columns, a stock and waste, and four piles you build in suit from ace to king. The name is older than the mouse — it comes from patience games played with a real deck — and it has always been about ordering cards, not placing bets. Our build keeps it that way: free, optional sound, and clear on-screen help.
If you are here from our casino or PayPal content, this page is deliberate contrast: the same break time, no line item on a bank statement, and no RTP — only a shuffled deal and a clean board if the sequence comes together.
How a deal opens up
You only see part of the layout at first: covered cards flip as you clear what is above them. Good players create empty columns for kings, delay moving low cards to foundations if they still help on the table, and choose Turn 1 for easier odds or Turn 3 for a sterner run — your choice in this build.
What is built in here
Alongside the green-felt look you get hint and undo, a timer for fun, and double-tap to foundation when you already know the card belongs. Nothing here connects to a wallet: it is a mini-game for a quiet break, not a product with a house edge.
A habit worth keeping — without a stake
Whether you have two minutes or twenty, the rhythm is the same: scan, move, draw, repeat. There is no leaderboard prize pool, no “buy coins” button, and no outcome tied to money — only a win screen when the suits are stacked. For a different patience variant with no stock at all, try our Yukon page after this one.
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