لا يمكن وضعها، يجب أن تكون بطاقةك من لون فئة معاكسة
Cannot drop, your card needs to be one rank lower
Cannot move multiple cards to foundation
Card suit doesn't match foundation pile suit
Card can only be dropped on top of a card pile
Cannot deal cards when there are empty tableau piles
You can only move {0} card(s) at a time based on the current free cells and tableau
The cards don't add up to 13 and cannot be moved
The card is inaccessible and move cannot be performed
Cards must be in sequential order (one higher or lower)
Alaska Solitaire
Play Alaska Solitaire Online – A Strategic Twist on the Classic Game
Alaska Solitaire is a smart and captivating variation of the traditional Classic Solitaire (also known as Klondike), designed for players who love a more strategic challenge. With its unique gameplay mechanics, Alaska offers an engaging experience that sets it apart from other solitaire games. Whether you're a solitaire enthusiast or a curious newcomer, this version will test your planning skills and reward thoughtful play.
Try it now at 👉 solitairex.io/alaska-solitaire
🃏 How to Play Alaska Solitaire
The objective of Alaska Solitaire is to move all the cards from the tableau and stock pile to the foundation piles, building each foundation in ascending order by suit – from Ace to King.
🧩 Game Setup:
- The game starts with seven tableau columns. Cards are dealt in a familiar descending format but with a twist in how you move them.
- There are four foundation piles, one for each suit.
- Cards not initially dealt to the tableau go into the stock pile, which you draw from during the game.
🔄 Gameplay Rules:
- In the tableau, cards can be placed on top of each other by alternating color, just like in Klondike.
- You can build tableau sequences in any order, not necessarily in descending rank.
- You can move any face-up card (along with any cards stacked on top of it), as long as the card you’re moving to matches the suit and is one rank lower.
- For example, you can move a 7♠ onto an 8♠ regardless of the cards below the 7♠.
- Empty tableau columns can only be filled with a King or a properly ordered sequence beginning with a King.
- The stock pile allows you to draw additional cards when no moves are available in the tableau.
This flexibility in movement allows for more complex strategies than in many solitaire variations and adds depth to the gameplay.
⚖️ Alaska Solitaire vs. Classic Solitaire – Key Differences
While Alaska Solitaire and Classic Solitaire share the same core objective—organizing all cards into foundation piles in ascending order—they differ in several important ways:
Feature | Alaska Solitaire | Classic Solitaire (Klondike) |
---|---|---|
Tableau building | Alternate colors, any rank order | Alternate colors, strict descending order |
Card movement | Can move sequences regardless of internal order, if top card fits | Can only move ordered descending sequences |
Strategy | Requires more planning and foresight | Simpler, more straightforward gameplay |
Difficulty | More challenging for experienced players | Easier for casual players |
These changes make Alaska Solitaire an excellent choice for players who want to take their solitaire skills to the next level.
🕹️ Why Play Alaska Solitaire at SolitaireX.io?
- ✅ Free to play – no downloads or sign-ups required
- ✅ Clean, responsive design for desktop, tablet, and mobile
- ✅ Smooth animations and intuitive controls
- ✅ Undo moves and hint options to help improve your strategy
- ✅ Track your time, moves, and win streaks
Whether you're looking to relax or test your tactical mind, Alaska Solitaire offers the perfect blend of accessibility and complexity.
👉 Ready for the challenge?
Play Alaska Solitaire now at solitairex.io/alaska-solitaire
Case Studies
All figures below come directly from our database. Using first-party data ensures every insight is evidence-based, up-to-date, and privacy-respectful.
Game Tier | Stand-out Titles | Win Rate |
---|---|---|
Quick Wins | Spider (1 Suit), Hole-in-One, TriPeaks | 70–84% |
Fair Challenges | Solitaire (Draw 1) – 913 k plays FreeCell, Golf |
45–63% |
Expert-Level | Spider (4 Suits), Forty Thieves, Double Scorpion | ≤11% |
Curious which moves turn the odds in your favor? Explore all the data & strategies →
What people say about us
Interview with Beverley Walker-Daury
At 87, Beverley Walker-Daury shares how SolitaireX brings joy, companionship, and purpose to her days in a retirement home.
Player Interview: Poul Andersen
Poul Andersen shares how playing SolitaireX helps him keep his brain sharp and active.
Player Interview: Peter Gross
Peter Gross, 81, shares how SolitaireX became his go-to place for relaxing Freecell games and friendly competition.
Player Spotlight: St0Sh0’s Record-Breaking Runs on SolitaireX
We sit down with speed-solitaire sensation St0Sh0 to talk record times, favorite variants, and why SolitaireX is his go-to card-game hub.
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Monte Carlo Solitaire: A Gentle Matching Puzzle with Real Strategy
Monte Carlo Solitaire looks simple but rewards smart planning and careful pair order. This guide explains strategies, drills, and tracking tips to turn quiet rounds into graceful wins.

TriPeaks Solitaire: The Relaxing Puzzle with a Strategic Beat
TriPeaks Solitaire blends calm play with smart strategy—clear peaks, extend chains, and manage the stock with care. This guide shows how simple habits and short drills turn quiet rounds into steady wins.

Spider Solitaire Win-Rate Tracking: 5-Minute Quickstart (Checklist)
You don’t need complex spreadsheets to improve at Spider Solitaire—just a tiny log and quick weekly review. This guide shows how small habits and 2-minute drills can sharpen decisions and raise your win rate.

Sharpen Your Mind (and Enjoy It): Solitaire, Sudoku & Mahjong for Everyday Brain Fitness
Short puzzle sessions with solitaire, sudoku, and mahjong can sharpen focus, support memory, and ease stress. These timeless games turn everyday breaks into light but powerful brain workouts.
Latest guides crafted by Stoyan Shopov and Kalin Nikolov
Golf Solitaire Mastery: Strategy, Stats & Flow
Deal 7 columns of 5 face‑up cards (35 total). The remaining 17 cards*form the stock; flip the first stock card to start the waste. You may move only exposed tableau cards, and only if the rank is exactly one higher or lower than the waste top. Suits don’t matter. When no move exists, flip a new waste card. Clear all tableau cards to win.
TriPeaks Solitaire Mastery: Strategy & Analytics
Two peaks are dust; one stubborn ridge remains. Your waste shows a 9. The tableau flashes 10‑J‑10‑9‑8 like a heartbeat. You nudge the 10, feel the cadence lock in, and—without overthinking—trace a neat descent that crumbles the last peak. That tiny spark of *flow* is why TriPeaks hooks serious players: rhythm, restraint, and the rush of a run that arrives exactly on time.
Pyramid Solitaire Mastery: Strategy, Stats & Joy
Picture the pyramid down to its last stubborn tier: a Queen pinned beneath a ridge, a lone Ace on the waste, and a King begging to be burned for tempo. Heartbeat, breath, click—then the whole structure yields in a rush. If you’ve hit that razor‑edge finale, you already know Pyramid’s secret: small decisions, made in the right order, change everything.
FreeCell Solitaire Mastery: Strategy & Analytics Guide
I have a 15 years personal, lived experience—picture a scene built from thousands of session logs and notes from serious players: It’s late, and the board looks jammed. You clear a single column, free one cell, and suddenly a 9♣‑8♦‑7♣‑6♦ chain glides into place, untying the knot you stared at for ten minutes. The rush isn’t luck—it’s the quiet pleasure of a plan snapping into focus. When did FreeCell last feel less like “killing time” and more like practicing a craft you can actually master?
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