Canfield Solitaire

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Canfield is an easy to learn HTML5 and JavaScript card game, with a gameplay similar to Klondike Solitaire: Use drag & drop to move cards from one pile to another Click on the stock to draw one more card Double-click on a card to add it to a foundation. Canfield is a solitaire card game with a very low probability to win. (More history) According to legend, it is originally a casino game, named after the casino owner who invented it.

Average Rating
Time to win
10 min and more
Difficulty
Medium
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Joo casino. Play Canfield Solitaire For Free! Each player is allowed one entry on the Canfield global leaderboard. If you achieve more than one score then your lower score will be removed. This helps prevent the leaderboard filling up with scores from the same player. The most popular solitaire card game, Klondike, is sometimes mistakenly referred to as Canfield.The real Canfield Solitaire, according to Hoyle's Rules of Games, was named after the proprietor of a Florida gambling establishment in the 1890s.Players could buy a deck of cards for $50 and win back $5 for every card they played into the foundations, or $500 if they were able.

Best Times
1.katherine chester17' 57'
2.katherine chester18' 56'
3.katherine chester19' 54'
4.Woody Woodpecker20' 14'
5.Woody Woodpecker21' 13'
6.Woody Woodpecker21' 18'
7.Woody Woodpecker21' 48'
8.Woody Woodpecker22' 03'
9.Woody Woodpecker22' 26'
10.Woody Woodpecker22' 27'
11.Woody Woodpecker22' 40'
12.Woody Woodpecker22' 51'
13.Woody Woodpecker22' 56'
14.Woody Woodpecker22' 57'
15.Woody Woodpecker23' 01'
Object
To move all the cards to the foundations.
Rules
- 16

Free Solitaire Games Online Alterations

foundation piles (top) - build up in suit from the rank of first card dealt to the first pile, wrapping from King to Ace as necessary, until each pile contains 13 cards.
Canfield Solitaire

- 8 tableau piles (below foundations) - build down by alternate color. Move groups of cards if they are in sequence down by alternate color. Spaces are filled from the reserve if possible, else by any card. At the start of the game 1 card is dealt to each pile.
- stock (face down) - turn over 3 cards at a time to the waste, by clicking. Unlimited redeals.
- waste (next to stock) - top card is available for play on the foundations or tableau.
- reserve (left of tableau) - Top card always available for play on the tableau or foundations. At the start of the game 39 cards are dealt here.

Canfield Solitaire Rules

The different piles

Play slot machines for real money. There are five different types of piles in Canfield Solitaire. They are:

  • The Stock: The pile of facedown cards in the upper left corner.
  • The Waste: The faceup pile next to the Stock in the upper left corner.
  • The Foundations: The four piles in the upper right corner.
  • The Reserve: The pile in the lower left corner underneath the waste.
  • The Tableau: The four piles that make up the main table.

The setup

A single card is dealt to the foundation of the same suit: this card forms the lead rank. 13 cards are dealt to the reserve pile, with the top card facing up. 1 card is dealt into each tableau. The remaining cards are placed into the stock face down. The waste and the other three foundations start off empty.

Objective

Canfield Solitaire Rules

The objective of Canfield Solitaire is to get all 52 cards into the foundations, or as many as possible if all 52 cannot be placed. You must put the cards onto the foundation in order according to suit and rank, starting from the leading rank dealt at the beginning of the game, wrapping from King to Ace if neccessary.

Allowed moves

  • Flip cards from the Stock onto the Waste. You can flip either 1 or 3 cards from the Stock onto the Waste. The number can be configured in Options.
  • Move a card from the Waste onto the Foundations. If the top card of the Waste can go onto one of the Foundations then you can drag it there.
  • Move a card from the Waste onto the Tableau. You can move the top card of the Waste onto one of the Tableau piles.
  • Move a card from a Foundation back onto the Tableau. You can move the top card of a Foundation back onto the Tableau. This isn't allowed in all Solitaire versions, but we allow it here :)
  • Move a card from the Reserve onto the Tableau You can move the top card of the Reserve to an available Tableaupile.
  • Move a card from the Reserve onto the Foundation You can move the top card of the Reserve to a foundation pile.
  • Move one or more cards on a Tableau pile to another. You can move one or more card from one Tableau onto another Tableau pile, if the latter pile's top card is either one higher than the first card of the moved cards, or the first moved card is a King being played on an Ace; and in a different color. For example, you could move a red 6 onto a black 7. Or, if you have red 6, black 5, red 4 face up on one tableau, you can move all of them at the same time onto a Tableau with a black 7. Or if one pile is red Queen on a black King you can play the pile on top of a red Ace. In normal rules of Canfield you can only move entire piles at a time, but the game is hard enough as it is, so we allow moving partial tableaus as well. (We used to only allow moving entires piles or just the top card of a pile, but in January 2021 we started allowing partial piles). If both the Reserve pile and a Tableau pile are empty you can place any card you can normally move to the empty pile.
  • You can move a Tableau card onto the Foundations. You can do this manually if you need to clear some space on the Tableau. You can either drag the cards onto the Foundation, or just double click it and then it will go there by itself. When all cards on the Tableau are turned up, and all cards from the stock and reserve are finished then the game will automatically move all the Tableau cards onto the Foundations, since at that point you are guaranteed to win the game.
  • You can Undo as many times as you like. The game offers unlimited undos. Each Undo counts as a new move though, so if you're trying to win the game in as few moves as possible you should be careful about how many undos you use.

Required moves

  • Play the top Reserve card into an empty Tableau. If any of the Tableau piles are empty for any reason you must place the top card from the Reserve into the empty pile. Keep in mind it is not possible to place cards back into the Reserve. The game will play the card for you and does not count it as a move.

Time and Moves

The game counts the moves you make, and measures the time it takes to finish the game and how many cards made it onto the foundation, so you can compete against your previous best games if you want.

Odds

- 8 tableau piles (below foundations) - build down by alternate color. Move groups of cards if they are in sequence down by alternate color. Spaces are filled from the reserve if possible, else by any card. At the start of the game 1 card is dealt to each pile.
- stock (face down) - turn over 3 cards at a time to the waste, by clicking. Unlimited redeals.
- waste (next to stock) - top card is available for play on the foundations or tableau.
- reserve (left of tableau) - Top card always available for play on the tableau or foundations. At the start of the game 39 cards are dealt here.

Canfield Solitaire Rules

The different piles

Play slot machines for real money. There are five different types of piles in Canfield Solitaire. They are:

  • The Stock: The pile of facedown cards in the upper left corner.
  • The Waste: The faceup pile next to the Stock in the upper left corner.
  • The Foundations: The four piles in the upper right corner.
  • The Reserve: The pile in the lower left corner underneath the waste.
  • The Tableau: The four piles that make up the main table.

The setup

A single card is dealt to the foundation of the same suit: this card forms the lead rank. 13 cards are dealt to the reserve pile, with the top card facing up. 1 card is dealt into each tableau. The remaining cards are placed into the stock face down. The waste and the other three foundations start off empty.

Objective

Canfield Solitaire Rules

The objective of Canfield Solitaire is to get all 52 cards into the foundations, or as many as possible if all 52 cannot be placed. You must put the cards onto the foundation in order according to suit and rank, starting from the leading rank dealt at the beginning of the game, wrapping from King to Ace if neccessary.

Allowed moves

  • Flip cards from the Stock onto the Waste. You can flip either 1 or 3 cards from the Stock onto the Waste. The number can be configured in Options.
  • Move a card from the Waste onto the Foundations. If the top card of the Waste can go onto one of the Foundations then you can drag it there.
  • Move a card from the Waste onto the Tableau. You can move the top card of the Waste onto one of the Tableau piles.
  • Move a card from a Foundation back onto the Tableau. You can move the top card of a Foundation back onto the Tableau. This isn't allowed in all Solitaire versions, but we allow it here :)
  • Move a card from the Reserve onto the Tableau You can move the top card of the Reserve to an available Tableaupile.
  • Move a card from the Reserve onto the Foundation You can move the top card of the Reserve to a foundation pile.
  • Move one or more cards on a Tableau pile to another. You can move one or more card from one Tableau onto another Tableau pile, if the latter pile's top card is either one higher than the first card of the moved cards, or the first moved card is a King being played on an Ace; and in a different color. For example, you could move a red 6 onto a black 7. Or, if you have red 6, black 5, red 4 face up on one tableau, you can move all of them at the same time onto a Tableau with a black 7. Or if one pile is red Queen on a black King you can play the pile on top of a red Ace. In normal rules of Canfield you can only move entire piles at a time, but the game is hard enough as it is, so we allow moving partial tableaus as well. (We used to only allow moving entires piles or just the top card of a pile, but in January 2021 we started allowing partial piles). If both the Reserve pile and a Tableau pile are empty you can place any card you can normally move to the empty pile.
  • You can move a Tableau card onto the Foundations. You can do this manually if you need to clear some space on the Tableau. You can either drag the cards onto the Foundation, or just double click it and then it will go there by itself. When all cards on the Tableau are turned up, and all cards from the stock and reserve are finished then the game will automatically move all the Tableau cards onto the Foundations, since at that point you are guaranteed to win the game.
  • You can Undo as many times as you like. The game offers unlimited undos. Each Undo counts as a new move though, so if you're trying to win the game in as few moves as possible you should be careful about how many undos you use.

Required moves

  • Play the top Reserve card into an empty Tableau. If any of the Tableau piles are empty for any reason you must place the top card from the Reserve into the empty pile. Keep in mind it is not possible to place cards back into the Reserve. The game will play the card for you and does not count it as a move.

Time and Moves

The game counts the moves you make, and measures the time it takes to finish the game and how many cards made it onto the foundation, so you can compete against your previous best games if you want.

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Fun trivia from Wikipedia!

Richard A. Canfield was a rather famed gambler and an owner of the Canfield Casino in Saratoga Springs, New York during the 1890s. This variant of Solitaire was played at this casino where players could pay $50 to purchase a deck. A player would then earn back $5 for each card they managed to get into the foundation before giving up, with getting all 52 cards, and thus winning, earning $500 instead. So the aim of Canfield wasn't as much get all 52 cards into the foundation, just enough to get your investment back and then some (so breaking even would be placing 10 cards and anything else being a bonus for the gambler). While Canfield was popular it has the downside of only a single player being able to play on each table, limiting the scalability. Canfield Solitaire is notorius for being difficult to win. Barring undos it is speculated that expert players can clear maybe 40% of games, and casual but frequent players between 15% and 20%. A computer simulation shows that ~70% of dealt Canfield games can be solved to begin with.





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