Seahaven Towers is an open solitaire game where every card is visible and foundations build by suit. The tableau uses ten columns with a small number of reserve cells.
Good play depends on clean same-suit organization and careful use of empty columns. Do not clear a column unless you know which king or sequence should occupy it next.
Compared with FreeCell, Seahaven Towers is tighter and more suit-focused. Baker's Game and Eight Off are the closest alternatives if you want more open-information solitaire.
You Win!
Final Score: 0
How to Play
Goal
Move all 52 cards to the four foundation piles, building each up by suit from Ace to King. The twist: tableau piles must be built down by the same suit only—no alternating colors like in FreeCell.
How to Win
Win by getting all 52 cards onto the foundation piles, each built up by suit from Ace to King.
Reserve Cells
Seahaven gives you 4 temporary storage spots to stage cards. Use them wisely to free up cards and build same-suit sequences.
How to Play
Build tableau piles down by same suit only (6♠ on 7♠). Unlike FreeCell's alternating colors, you can only stack matching suits.
Start foundations with Aces, then build up by suit to Kings
Move any single card to an empty reserve cell
Move cards from reserve cells back to the tableau or foundations
Card Mobility
Seahaven challenges you with single-card moves only—no stacking sequences to grab at once. With 4 reserve cells and 10 columns to manage, every move counts as you try to expose and sequence cards of the same suit.
Quick Moves
Double-click a card to auto-move it to the best available spot: foundations first, then tableau.
How Seahaven Differs from Baker's Game
Both games share the same-suit restriction and 4 reserve cells, but Seahaven ramps up the difficulty with 10 tableau columns (vs Baker's 8). More columns means longer sequences to build with the same maneuvering space—a punishing combination.