Solitaire card games/Baker's Dozen
This game is so called because there are 13 columns in the game.
Rules
edit- Deal the cards cards are dealt into columns of four on the tableau, resulting in 13 columns.
- Any King that is in the top or middle of each column must be placed on the bottom before the game starts. Two Kings that are mixed into one column are placed on the bottom without changing their order
- The object of the game is to build all the cards onto the four foundations.
- You must first free up the four aces and if one of them is found, it is placed on the foundation.
- Building on the foundation is up by suit, each from ace to king.
- Only the top cards of each column can are available, and cards on the tableau, if they cannot be placed on the foundations yet, can be built down regardless of suit.
- Furthermore, once all cards are taken out of a column, the column can never be filled.
- The game is won when all cards end up in the foundations.
Variations
editHere are some variations of Baker's Dozen:
- In Spanish Patience, foundations are built up regardless of suit.
- Castles in Spain is akin to Spanish Patience, but the cards in the tableau are built down by alternate color.
- In Good Measure, two aces are taken out and placed on the foundations while the rest of the deck is shuffled and laid out in columns of five cards, resulting in 10 columns. Like in Baker's Dozen, Kings that are at the top or in the middle of their respective columns are placed at the bottom and the game proceeds in the process stated above.
- Portuguese Solitaire is halfway between Baker's Dozen and Spanish Patience because empty columns can only be filled with Kings.