Spider Solitaire’s King-to-Ace runs across the 1-, 2-, and 4-suit board
In Spider Solitaire, you build descending columns by dragging cards from stack to stack, aiming for complete King-to-Ace runs of the same suit. The 1-, 2-, and 4-suit modes change the pressure fast, because mixed stacks can block a move and force you to plan the next reveal before you commit. If you open a new column too early, you can split a useful run and slow the clean-up.
It fits the logic games lane because every drag changes the tableau. As a Card puzzle, it asks you to manage partial stacks instead of firing off random moves. The Solitaire side shows up in the same end goal: clear the board by finishing ordered suit runs.
Mouse drag controls that run in your browser
Use the mouse to click and drag cards into place on desktop, or tap the same moves on a phone. The game runs free online in your browser with no download and no signup, so you can start a fresh deal in seconds on common devices. The layout is mobile-friendly, and the same tableau stays readable when you are lining up a long run on a smaller screen.
When a full stack clears, the empty space becomes the best tool for reshuffling a buried card or extending a half-finished sequence. In harder 2-suit and 4-suit rounds, that open column can decide whether you keep a chain together or trap a needed card under the wrong mix.
Similar suit-building games if you want another layout
If you want a near match, Spider Solitaire Classic uses the same King-to-Ace suit building on a familiar board.
Best Classic Spider Solitaire is close as well, because it keeps the same stack-and-clear rhythm while staying focused on the classic formula.
Spider Solitaire 2 gives you another take on the two-suit and four-suit challenge for players who want a similar setup.
Platform
Browser Desktop , Mobile and Tablet
Release
25 january 2017
Last Update
25 january 2017