6 Peaks Solitaire and the double-deck Tri Peaks table
6 Peaks Solitaire keeps the core Tri Peaks rule intact in a single-player table: you clear cards by clicking one rank higher or lower than the base card at the lower right. The hook is the larger setup, with twice the cards and 15 layouts that change how quickly the peaks collapse. Because the tableau starts crowded, every reveal matters, and one wrong click can block a useful run.
As a browser card game in the logic games category, it leans on pattern reading more than speed. You use the mouse to select the next playable card, then drop to the row of face-down cards when the board runs dry. That fallback keeps the run moving even when the peaks stop offering a chain, and it works well on mobile-friendly screens as well as desktop.
Face-up chains, hidden cards, and the bottom-right base card
The best turns usually come from planning two moves ahead: clear a top card, flip the card behind it, then check whether the new value opens a longer run. Because the base card sits at the bottom right, you are always comparing the board against one fixed value, which makes the decision easy to read but not always easy to solve. That tension gives each layout its own pace.
If you like single-player card puzzles, the solitaire tag fits here, and the 15-layout structure gives you more variety than a standard tableau. Fans of adjacent-card clearing will also recognise the rhythm in Crescent Solitaire, which uses a different board shape but still asks you to chase the next legal rank and manage buried cards carefully. For another close match with a tougher card stack, Best Classic Spider Solitaire scratches the same patient, board-reading itch, only with suit-based sequencing instead of peaks.
Platform
Browser Desktop , Mobile and Tablet
Release
29 august 2021
Last Update
29 august 2021