Impossible de déposer, votre carte doit être de la couleur opposée
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)
Five Bridges Solitaire
Five Bridges Solitaire 🎲🃏
Welcome to Five Bridges Solitaire, a lively twist on TriPeaks for the ultimate card wiz! 😎 This game stacks five peaks of cards linked by “bridges” (rows of cards) between them, so you’ll have more layers and moves to think through. It’s like TriPeaks on steroids – still all about clearing cards one rank higher or lower, but with extra peaks to conquer. Whether you’re in it for the strategy or just want a fun challenge, Five Bridges serves up tons of mobile-friendly excitement. 📱✨
How to Play
- Tap to Match: Simply tap any exposed card that is one rank higher or lower than the top card of the discard pile. Kings and Aces wrap around (Ace can play on King or 2).
- Draw from Deck: If no moves are available, tap the deck (stock pile) to deal a new card to the waste/discard pile. You get one pass through the deck, so use cards wisely.
- Uncover and Continue: When you remove a card, any cards beneath it that become fully free are automatically turned face-up. Keep clearing cards to expose hidden ones and open new runs.
- Mobile-Friendly Controls: This game is optimized for touch – just tap cards to move them. You can also tap the 💡 hint icon or ↩️ undo icon in-game if you need help or made a mistake.
Rules of the Game
- Layout: Five Bridges has five triangular peaks (pyramids) of cards, with horizontal “bridges” connecting them. All cards start face-down except the bottom row.
- Move by Rank: You can move a card from the tableau to the waste pile only if it’s one rank higher or lower than the current top waste card, regardless of suit. For example, play a 7 on an 8 or a 9 on an 8.
- Free Up Cards: Removing a card exposes the one underneath. Any face-down card that becomes completely uncovered is flipped face-up immediately.
- Stock & Waste: If no moves are possible, tap the stock to deal the next card to the waste pile. You continue drawing cards one by one until you can play.
- Winning: You win by clearing all cards in the five peaks and bridges (emptying the tableau) before the stock runs out.
- Losing: You lose if you exhaust the entire stock and still have cards remaining with no legal moves. Plan ahead to avoid getting stuck!
History of Five Bridges Solitaire
Five Bridges Solitaire is a creative offshoot of TriPeaks (Three Peaks) Solitaire. The original TriPeaks game was invented in 1989 by Robert Hogue as part of a flexible family of solitaire games. Hogue designed TriPeaks to encourage new layouts and challenges. Over time, clever designers and digital platforms built many variants, adding peaks and twists to the classic rules. Five Bridges is one such variant – it replaces the usual three peaks with five peaks connected by bridges. The exact author of Five Bridges isn’t documented, but it’s been popularized online by sites like SolitaireX and others who love spicing up TriPeaks. It brings a bit of extra complexity and fun for solitaire veterans!
Tips and Tricks for Pros
- Expose More Cards: Always prefer a move that uncovers the most hidden cards. Picking a card that frees up two or more cards is usually better than one that frees up only one. Think ahead: which card will open up new possibilities?
- Build Long Runs: Aim to keep your sequence going as long as possible. Longer runs score exponentially more (e.g. a 10-card run scores much more than two 5-card runs). In practice, clearing a big sequence of cards in one go is hugely rewarding.
- Balance the Peaks: Don’t tunnel down one side too much; clear from different peaks to avoid blocking yourself. Sometimes you’ll have a choice — clear below a “bridge” on one peak or on another. Pick the one that keeps options open.
- Manage the Stock: Avoid wasting cards from the stock. Only draw a new card when you truly have no moves. Each time you draw, your current run resets, so try to squeeze out every play before tapping the deck.
- Use Power-Ups Wisely: If the game allows hints or undo, use them strategically. Hints can show a good move if you’re stuck, and undo can save a great run if you mis-tapped. (But on mobile, try to rely on skill – it’s more fun that way!)
🎯 Ready to Play?
Think you’ve got what it takes? Play Five Bridges Solitaire now on your phone or computer at https://solitairex.io/five-bridges-solitaire 🚀. Feel the rush of clearing those five peaks one by one!
Looking for more solitaire fun? Check out all the other free solitaire games at https://solitairex.io/free-games/other 📚. Happy shuffling!
Sources: Five Bridges rules and strategy are based on TriPeaks Solitaire mechanics, and advanced tips from solitaire strategy guides.
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.
Fresh from the SolitaireX Blog

Track Your Spider Solitaire Progress: Build Your Own Win-Rate System
This article is the final part of a Spider Solitaire mastery series, focusing on how to track your games and build a personal win-rate system. By logging key metrics, spotting patterns, and reflecting on notes, it shows how players can turn simple records into powerful insights that boost skill, confidence, and long-term enjoyment.

Spider Solitaire Strategy Deep Dive: From Mixed Runs to Clean Wins
This article is a deep-dive strategy guide for Spider Solitaire (Part 2) aimed at intermediate and advanced players. It builds on the basics from Part 1 and focuses on how to turn messy mid-game layouts into structured, winnable positions.

Solitaire Variations Glossary: Essential Terms by Gameplay Category
Explore the ultimate glossary of solitaire terms and concepts, explained in clear and simple language. From tableau, foundations, and free cells to popular solitaire variations like Klondike, Spider, FreeCell, Pyramid, and TriPeaks, this guide helps beginners and enthusiasts understand the rules, moves, and key strategies of solitaire.

Mastering Solitaire: A Data‑Driven Journey from Frustration to Triumph
An in-depth, data-rich guide analyzing over 366,000 Classic Solitaire games. Explore win rates, time and move efficiency, and actionable tips—bringing sabermetrics-style solitaire research to your strategy.
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?
Media About Us
dev.to

How: Modern Libraries with Classic Games
Browser Based Online Game Directory

SolitaireX.io has been featured on bbogd.com, where players worldwide find Browser Based Online Games
itch.io
SolitaireX.io has been featured on itch.io, where players worldwide enjoy our collection of classic and modern solitaire games.
IndieDB
IndieDB featured SolitaireX as a unique browser-based platform with 70+ free solitaire online variations, highlighting our place in the global indie gaming community.
0