Classic games

Yukon Solitaire

A Klondike-style variant with no stock: every card starts in seven columns, you may drag a face-up run as long as the lead card (the one you place) fits, and you can take cards back from foundations when it helps. Not real-money play.

All classic games Russian Same suit on tableau

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Time 0:00Moves 0

Yukon solitaire: no stock. Build down alternating red and black on the tableau. You can move a face-up group when only the lead card fits; cards above it can be out of order. Foundations build A→K by suit, and the top card can move back to the table when a rule set allows. Empty columns: King (or a stack with a King on the contact) only. Double-click a column bottom to try auto-foundation. Rules follow common online descriptions (e.g. Solitaired).

Cards · Patience · Free

Yukon solitaire
all cards on the table

No stock, no waste — 52 cards in seven columns from the first deal, foundations to A–K, and a lead-card rule for moving blocks. For fun only.

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How to play

  1. Goal: build all four foundations from ace to king, one suit per pile. The tableau is built down in alternating red and black (like Klondike), but a face-up group can move in one go when the first card of that group is the one that may legally sit on the target — the cards above it in the hand do not need to be in sequence.
  2. Select a card (or the last card in a run you want) to highlight a stack from that point up. Tap a foundation or column to move. An empty column only accepts a King (or a group whose contact card is a King), same as many patience games.
  3. Foundations: the top card of a foundation can return to the tableau in this build — select the foundation, then tap a column where the card fits, when you need to unblock a line.
  4. Double-click the bottom card of a column to auto-play to a foundation when the rules allow. Hint shows a legal move; Undo steps back. The toolbar shows Time and Moves for your session only.
  5. New game shuffles a fresh deal. This is not gambling: no stake, no payout, and no account.

The rule that makes Yukon feel different from Klondike

In classic Klondike, a dragged run must already be a clean descending alternating-color sequence. In Yukon, you may move a block of face-up cards when the first card of the block (the one that sits on the target) is a legal next step — the cards above it in the hand can be out of order. That multiplies the number of lines you need to test and is why a whole column matters, not just the bottom card. Our page is a free, no-stake patience game for a quiet break.

No stock, no “bad draw”

Every one of the fifty-two cards is in the tableau from the start. You cannot blame a lousy flip from the pack — there is no pack. What changes is the combinatorics of columns, gaps, and when to use foundation take-backs.

Hint, undo, and practice

Hint and undo are for honest practice: the “right” move is sometimes one step back before three steps forward. Nothing here connects to a wallet or a house edge.

A palate cleanser, not a wager

If you are here from our casino or PayPal content, this page is deliberate contrast: same break in the day, no line on a bank statement. For a same-suit, no take-back challenge in the same family, see Russian solitaire.

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