Bristol (solitaire)

Bristol is a Patience game using a deck of 52 playing cards. It has an unusual feature of building regardless of suit on both the foundations and on the tableau; it is also one of the easiest to win.

Bristol
A Patience game
Named variantsBelvedere
FamilyFan
DeckSingle 52-card
See also Glossary of solitaire

Rules

Eight piles (or fans) of three cards each are dealt onto the tableau. Any king that is not on the bottom of its pile is placed underneath. Then three cards are placed under these piles. These form the bases for the three reserve piles.

The initial layout of the game of Bristol.

Whenever an ace becomes available, it becomes a foundation, on which it can be built up regardless of suit up to a King. The same is done on the three other aces.

The top card of each pile on the tableau and the top card of each reserve pile is available to be built on the foundations and around the tableau. Like the foundations, the piles on the tableau are built down regardless of suit. Only one card can be moved at a time and when a pile becomes empty, it is never filled.

Cards in the stock are dealt onto the reserve three at a time, one for each pile. In effect, gaps on the reserve are filled during the deal; therefore, when a reserve pile becomes empty, it is not filled until the next batch of three cards is dealt.

The game is won when all cards end up in the foundations. Considering that all building is done regardless of suit, the chance of achieving this is very high.

Variations

  • Belvedere is another solitaire card game playing with a deck of playing cards. It is played exactly as Bristol except for one rule: an Ace is separated from the deck at the beginning of the game and immediately set up as a foundation.
gollark: The AST one sounds easier, do so.
gollark: ```osmarks@procyon ~> lsblkNAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINTmmcblk0 179:0 0 7.3G 0 disk ├─mmcblk0p1 179:1 0 2M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p2 179:2 0 2M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p3 179:3 0 1M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p4 179:4 0 1M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p5 179:5 0 1M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p6 179:6 0 1M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p7 179:7 0 4M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p8 179:8 0 8M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p9 179:9 0 8M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p10 179:10 0 4M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p11 179:11 0 1M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p12 179:12 0 1M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p13 179:13 0 1M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p14 179:14 0 1M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p15 179:15 0 1M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p16 179:16 0 2M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p17 179:17 0 20M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p18 179:18 0 5M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p19 179:19 0 1M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p20 179:20 0 16M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p21 179:21 0 16M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p22 179:22 0 200M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p23 179:23 0 1.5G 0 part │ ├─mmcblk0p23p1 254:0 0 94M 0 part /boot│ └─mmcblk0p23p2 254:1 0 1.4G 0 part /├─mmcblk0p24 179:24 0 150M 0 part ├─mmcblk0p25 179:25 0 9M 0 part └─mmcblk0p26 179:26 0 5.4G 0 part mmcblk0boot0 179:32 0 4M 1 disk mmcblk0boot1 179:64 0 4M 1 disk mmcblk0rpmb 179:96 0 4M 0 disk ```android_partition_scheme_irl
gollark: The GTech™ ones, with infinite processing power but somewhat limited memory.
gollark: Oh, I mostly use an infinitely powerful computer.
gollark: Yes, I assume it's wine badness.

See also

  • List of solitaires
  • Glossary of solitaire
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