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    Spider Solitaire 2

    ♥️ There are several versions of the popular online Spider Solitaire. They include dealing cards of one, two or four suits. Next we'll consider the rules and subtleties of the game with a two-suit deal.

    ✅ Spider Solitaire 2 rules

    In this version of online solitaire two suits are used: hearts and spades. The total number of cards in the game is still 104. 54 of them are in columns and must be flipped over face up by the player. These are 10 columns in which the proportion of red and the proportion of black cards is almost the same, but still is left to the chance. The version with spades and hearts is considered medium difficulty, but not all of the layouts can actually lead to a victory. There is still some percentage of non-winning layouts, and it is higher compared to the one-suit game.

    The goal remains the same as in the one-suit game version. It will be necessary to move all the cards to the Foundation. Moving is possible in piles. However, here it is necessary to collect the piles by suits. Moving cards between columns also has its own subtleties. A red card can be placed on top of a black card and vice versa, but you need to do it in such a way that moves eventually do not prevent you from collecting a pile of the same suit. The collected sequence of cards of the same suit is automatically moved to the Foundation. In this version of the game the difficulty is to decide on a case-by-case basis whether to move a card of one suit and place it on the top of a card of another suit in the column. Card piles of different suits can't be moved between columns; this can only be done with a pile of cards of the same suit.

    Subtleties and Rules

    Like in one-suit solitaire, in two-suit layout you should try to flip over face up as many cards as possible in columns. But if for this you have to sandwich the suits, placing a black card onto a red card, which is on top of a black one, then this may make significantly difficult the further moving of card piles and opening new positions in the columns. There can be no single opinion here; the user will have to decide the expediency of such moves in each specific case. Like in the one-suit version, it is worth paying special attention to the single cards on the virtual table. If there is only one face-up four as yet in the layout, and there are many threes or fives around, it's worth pulling a four and placing it with one of the three rank cards and one of the fives. But which of the threes or fives should be chosen? This is the subtlety of the game, which only experienced users know.

    If there is a choice of several identical cards on the table, then it is worth using those, which are on top of the face-down cards in the columns. In this case, moving to other positions will flip over face up new cards in the columns, which increases the probability of victory. It's also worth choosing to move a card that blocks part of the arranged combination of other cards, especially if it is a ready sequence of 3, 4 or more cards. It is worth trying to pull it to the surface, without obscuring it by other cards.

    There is one more nuance. If two identical cards appear on the tops of two different columns, and there is a possibility of moving one of them, then it is worth considering the following. You need to determine which of the cards blocks the least number of cards in the column, and try to move it. A completely empty, clean cell is undoubtedly a bonus in a two-suit game because you can move any card or any sequence of the same suit arranged in order into it. Usually an empty cell appearing in the columns allows one sequence to be removed from another partially collected sequence. You must decide: moving which cards to an empty cell will give you an opportunity to unblock more moves or even collect a complete combination to move it to the Foundation.

    Challenging Moves

    Unlike a one-suit game, a two-suit solitaire may require complex moves in order to flip over face up more cards in columns. Example: there is a king of spades and a queen of spades on top of it in the first column, a king of hearts in the second column and the wrong sequence of queen of spades and jack of hearts in the third column. If you move the jack of hearts to the queen of spades, which forms a sequence with the king of spades and then move a single queen of spades, placing it on the top of the king of hearts, you can flip over one card in the column. The jack of hearts should be moved back onto the former queen of spades to keep the correct sequence of king of spades ‒ queen of spades as close to the surface as possible.
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