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Probably the fastest game of cards you?ll ever play! Try and get rid of all your cards before the computer does by placing your cards on one of the two middle piles. The value of the card must be one greater or one less than the card you drop it on. If no drops are left then click on the ?flip cards? button to swap the cards around. The faster you play, the more points you?ll get! Use the mouse to control all aspects of the game.
Texas hold 'em (also hold'em, holdem) is the most popular of the community card poker games. It is also the most popular poker variant played in most casinos in the United States.[1] Its no-limit betting form is used in the main event of the World Series of Poker (WSOP) and the World Poker Tour. Although it can theoretically be played by up to 22 players (or 23 if burn cards are not used), it is generally played with between 2 and 10 people. It is one of the most positional of all poker variants, since the order of betting is fixed throughout all betting rounds. Hold 'em is commonly played outside of the United States, but seven-card stud, Omaha hold 'em and other games may be more popular in some places. Like most variants of poker, the objective of Texas hold 'em is to win pots, where a pot is the sum of the money bet by oneself and other players in a hand. A pot is won either at the showdown by forming the best five card poker hand out of the seven cards available, or by betting to cause other players to fold and abandon their claim to the pot. The objective of winning players is not winning individual pots, but rather making mathematically correct decisions. As a result of making such decisions, winning poker players are able to maximize their expected utility and win more money than they lose in the long run.
Solitaire or Patience is any of a family of single-player card games of a generally similar character, but varying greatly in detail. The games are generally referred to as "Patience" in British English while "solitaire" is the American English term. These games typically involve dealing cards from a shuffled deck into a prescribed arrangement on a tabletop, from which the player attempts to reorder the deck by suit and rank through a series of moves transferring cards from one place to another under prescribed restrictions. Some games allow for the reshuffling of the deck(s), and/or the placement of cards into new or 'empty' locations. There are many different solitaire games, but the term "solitaire" is often used to refer specifically to the most well-known form, called "Klondike". Klondike and some other solitaire games have been adapted into two-player competitive games. There are a vast array of variations on the solitaire/patience theme, using either one or more decks of cards, with rules of varying complexity and skill levels. Many of these have been converted to electronic form and are available as computer games. Basic forms of Klondike solitaire and FreeCell come with every current installation of Microsoft Windows, for example, and both Windows Me and Windows XP also include a version of Spider. Many software solitaire collections can be downloaded from the internet at no charge.
The goal of Solitaire is to re-build the four colours of the card game. The board of the game is subdivided in 3 parts. At the top right, the 4 empty spaces are the location where you will have to pile up the card of a same colour in ascending order, as in starting with the "1" and ending with the King. At the end of the game, the 4 piles shall be complete. In the middle part, there are 7 lines of hidden cards except of the top one face open. For these 7 lines, cards are piled up alternatively red/black in descending order. For exemple, if you have a "black 10" in a line and a "red 9" in another one, you can put the "red 9" on the "black 10". The advantage is that when you move a card away from a line, it discovers the one that was below it. When one of the face open cards can be put on one of the 4 piles up right, it shall be moved there. When one of the 7 lines is empty, you can re-start it by putting a King in it. In the upper left part, you have the reserver. This is a pile of hidden cards. When you are stuck with the 7 middle lines, you can take a card in the reserve. It will be discovered and place at the right of the pile. If you can use it, move it to where it is possible. If you cannot use it, it will remain beside the pile and it will be covered with the next card that you will take in the reserve. To pick up a card, click on it. To move a card, click and drag it with left mouse button pressed to where you want, then release the button. However, for the cards to be put on the 4 upper right piles, you can also simply double-click on these and they will be dropped there automatically. Small advice: Try to discover as much cards as possible from the 7 middles lines. At the begining, you have of course to search for the "1" to be able to open the 4 upper right piles. Good luck.