Bisley is a solitaire card game which uses a deck of 52 playing cards. It is one of the few one-deck games in which the player has options on which foundation a card can be placed.
First the four aces are taken out and laid on the tableau to start the foundations. Then four columns of three cards are placed overlapping each other separately under the aces. After that, nine columns of four cards, also overlapping each other, are dealt to the right of the aces and first four columns. If the player decides to lay out all of the cards, he must make sure that there are four rows of thirteen cards and the first four cards on the first row should be the four aces.
Here is the method of game play:
The game is won when all cards end up in the foundations. It actually does not
matter where the ace and king foundations of each suit would meet and how many
cards the ace and king foundations of each suit will have. At the end of one
game for example, the K is the only one on
its foundation while the rest of spade cards are built on the A
; the A
remains
unbuilt because all club cards are built on the K
; the A
is built up to
4
while the K
is built down to 5
;
and the A
is built up to
8
while the K
is built down to 9
.
In fact, the ace and king foundation of a suit can meet anywhere.
(Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bisley_(solitaire))