Yukon (solitaire) explained

Yukon is a type of patience or solitaire card game using a single deck of playing cards like Klondike, but there is no deck or stock, and manipulation of the tableau works differently.[1]

Yukon
Subtitle:A Patience game
Deck:Single 52-card
Family:Klondike-like
Footnotes:See also Glossary of solitaire

Rules

Yukon has the following adjustments to the game-play of standard Klondike solitaire:

Strategy

Variants

Russian Solitaire is a solitaire card game that is very similar in layout and play to Yukon. Its difference from Yukon is that building is by suit.[2] [3] The game should not be confused with Nidgi Novgorod, first recorded in the 1903 American Hoyle and also sometimes called Russian Solitaire, which is a simple, one-pack, non-builder,[4] nor with Russian Patience, first described in 1876, which is a two-pack, open packer similar to Capricieuse.[5]

Other Yukon variants remove the usual restriction that only Kings be placed in empty tableau spaces. Also closely related to Yukon are Alaska and Australian Patience.

References

  1. "Yukon" in Book: Roya, Will. 2021. Card Night: Classic Games, Classic Decks, and the History Behind Them. Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers. 47. 9780762473519.
  2. Web site: Heaney . Rory . 2021-08-10 . A Guide to Russian Solitaire . 2023-07-11 . Solitaire by MobilityWare . en-US.
  3. Web site: Solitaire City - Yukon Solitaire Game Variations . 2023-07-11 . www.solitairecity.com.
  4. The Standard Hoyle (1904), p. 438.
  5. Parlett (1979), p. 321.

External Sources

See also