<h1>Baker's Game</h1> <p> FreeCell type. 1 deck. No redeal. <h3>Object</h3> <p> Move all cards to the foundations. <h3>Quick Description</h3> <p> Like <a href="freecell.html">FreeCell</a>, but the piles build down by suit. <h3>Rules</h3> <p> All cards are dealt at the start of the game. To compensate for this there are 4 free cells which can hold any - and just one - card. <p> Cards may only be moved onto cards of the same suit. <p> The number of cards you can move as a sequence is restricted by the number of free cells - the number of free cells required is the same as if you would make an equivalent sequence of moves with single cards. (As a shortcut, the computer also considers the number of free piles so that you can move even more cards as one single sequence.) <h3>History</h3> <p> <i>Baker's Game</i> is named after the mathematician C.L. Baker and was first published in Martin Gardner's June 1968 <i>Mathematical Games</i> column in <i>Scientific American</i>.