Baker's Game looks like FreeCell, but tableau sequences must be built down in the same suit. Foundations still build upward from ace to king.
That single rule change makes the game much more exacting. You need to plan farther ahead because one misplaced reserve card can block an entire suit sequence.
FreeCell is the more flexible version, Eight Off gives you more storage, and Spanish Patience or Seahaven Towers shift the challenge again through different empty-column and suit rules.
You Win!
Final Score: 0
How to Play
Goal
Sort all 52 cards into the four foundation piles, building each by suit from Ace to King. The twist: tableau piles must be built in descending order within the same suit.
How to Win
Complete when every card sits in its foundation pile, organized by suit from Ace to King.
Free Cells
Four temporary holding spots—one card each—help you sequence cards and clear columns.
How to Play
Tableau piles: Stack cards of the same suit in descending order (♥7 goes on ♥8). Only Kings can start an empty column.
Foundation piles: Start with any Ace, then build up within each suit
To free cell: Click a card to tuck it away temporarily
From free cell: Drag or click to return cards to the tableau or foundation
Moving Multiple Cards
Only same-suit sequences can move together. The formula stays the same: (empty free cells + 1) × (empty columns + 1)
With 2 empty free cells and 1 empty column, that's (2+1) × (1+1) = 6 cards maximum.
Quick Moves
Double-click any card to auto-send it to a valid foundation or free cell.
How Baker's Game Differs from Freecell
Freecell lets you stack alternating colors (red on black). Baker's Game is stricter—cards must share the same suit to stack. Same suits, harder puzzle.