Ever wanted to hunt for pirate treasure while playing cards? This is Klondike solitaire with a pirate adventure skin wrapped around it. You're helping a brave heroine track down her father's hidden fortune on a mysterious island, flipping cards and outsmarting enemies along the way. It's a browser-based Unity game that works on desktop and mobile, so you can chase treasure anywhere.
The rules are simple to learn, but winning consistently takes patience and planning.
Your main goal is to move all cards into four foundation piles—one for each suit. You start with Aces, then stack Twos, Threes, and so on until you hit the King. Every card needs to go home in order, so you can't skip ranks. Watch for those Aces in the opening deal; they're your ticket to getting started.
The seven piles in the middle are your workspace. You can move cards between these stacks, but only if you follow the rules: alternate colors and descending ranks. A red 6 goes on a black 7, a black Jack on a red Queen. You can drag entire sequences of cards if they're properly arranged. Only Kings can start an empty pile, so use those slots strategically when you clear a column.
Got stuck? Click the deck to reveal more cards. Unlike some brutal solitaire variants, this game lets you flip through the deck unlimited times. That means you can carefully plan each move without worrying about running out of chances. The game ends when all cards are stacked in the foundation piles—or when you admit defeat and restart.
Perfect for casual players who want something relaxing but mentally engaging. If you're looking to kill 10-20 minutes during a break, this is ideal. The pirate theme adds just enough flavor to make it more interesting than plain solitaire, but it's still a card game at heart. Safe for all ages—no violence, no time pressure, just you versus the deck. Hardcore gamers might find it too slow, but if you enjoy puzzle-solving at your own pace, you'll appreciate the thoughtful gameplay.
It's super chill and meditative. There's no timer ticking down, no enemies rushing you, just the gentle challenge of solving a card puzzle. The pirate island visuals are colorful and polished—way better than those boring green-felt solitaire games. The animations when you complete a pile or make a good move add a satisfying touch. It's the kind of game you can play while listening to music or a podcast. The difficulty comes from the random card shuffle, not from twitch reflexes, so some games will be easier than others based purely on luck.
Saves: The game uses browser cache to remember your progress, so you can close the tab and come back later. Just don't clear your browsing data if you're mid-game. Performance: Since it's a card game with 2D graphics, it runs smoothly even on older devices. I didn't notice any lag or stuttering—the Unity engine handles it well. Mobile performance is solid too; the touch controls respond instantly when you drag cards around.
A solid, relaxing solitaire game with enough visual polish to keep it interesting.
Simple and responsive—exactly what you need for a card game.
Developed by borr1980@gmail.com and released on December 19, 2024. It's a recent release, so the Unity build feels modern and optimized for current browsers.