Compare Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Suricate Software. Published by Grey Alien Games. Released on 11/7/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie.

Four hundred levels of higher-or-lower solitaire wrapped in glowing undersea scenery, plus 18 bonus variants and 100 Mahjong levels. Suricate knows what they're doing here, and so will you within minutes.

I have a soft spot for games that know their lane and work it with quiet precision. Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition is exactly that kind of release: a generous, unhurried solitaire package built around a specific undersea mood, and it earns that mood rather than just slapping an ocean wallpaper on a stock card engine. The core mechanic is a higher-or-lower rhythm where you match cards one value above or below the active card in your deck. It sounds simple because it is, but the satisfaction lives in building long chains, weaving up and down through runs of consecutive cards before you're forced to draw. Each level is a small puzzle of how long you can sustain that chain before the board stops cooperating. The 400 main solitaire levels are layered with board obstacles that arrive gradually: locks, chains, seaweed, and more blocking cards you need to reach. The pacing here is genuinely good. Nothing feels cheap, and the Normal and Hard difficulty modes add meaningful tension for players who want to chase three-star clears, while Relaxed mode strips the pressure entirely for sessions you just want to wind down with. The 18 bonus solitaire variants, ranging from familiar names like Klondike, Spider, and Freecell to more unusual layouts, open up as you progress through the map, so the game keeps offering you something new across a very long play time. Completionists who hunted every achievement in similar entries in the series have logged forty to fifty hours, sometimes more. The 100-level Mahjong bonus mode is a full second game's worth of content sitting quietly alongside the solitaire, which is either a blessing or a thing you never touch depending on your disposition. I find it a lovely palate cleanser. The presentation is where Suricate lets themselves feel a little handcrafted. The ten aquascapes you restore piece by piece using emeralds collected in levels are genuinely pretty, and watching a scene fill in with coral and fish over many sessions gives the grind a satisfying visual shape. The soundtrack sits in that soft, ambient register that solitaire games live or die by: not intrusive, slightly ethereal, the kind of music that doesn't demand attention but holds the atmosphere together when you let it. Fish Quests unlock decorative sea creatures that populate your built scenes, which adds a low-stakes collector loop that works nicely without ever feeling like a demand on your time. The honest critique is that Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire does not innovate. Community players who have spent time with earlier entries in the series will recognize every system here. The card-chain solitaire formula, the castle-building reward loop, the Mahjong bonus, the variant unlocks: it is all familiar territory. If you bounced off a previous Jewel Match title, this one will not convert you. Some players have also noted that the Supersize levels, which are extra-large board layouts, drag noticeably, and failing a long Supersize level after several minutes of effort can sting. The Challenge levels court a luck element that not everyone appreciates. These are real friction points, not invented ones. For the player who wants a generous, low-stress solitaire experience with a beautiful aesthetic wrapper and enough content to last weeks of casual sessions, this Collector's Edition delivers exactly what it promises with very little fuss. It is a game that respects your time without apologizing for being a card game. Rare quality in a crowded genre. Kai, Scout Team

Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition
CasualIndie

Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition

Nov 7, 2019Suricate SoftwareGrey Alien Games
GamerScout Says

Four hundred levels of higher-or-lower solitaire wrapped in glowing undersea scenery, plus 18 bonus variants and 100 Mahjong levels. Suricate knows what they're doing here, and so will you within minutes.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $1.13

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition

I have a soft spot for games that know their lane and work it with quiet precision. Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition is exactly that kind of release: a generous, unhurried solitaire package built around a specific undersea mood, and it earns that mood rather than just slapping an ocean wallpaper on a stock card engine. The core mechanic is a higher-or-lower rhythm where you match cards one value above or below the active card in your deck. It sounds simple because it is, but the satisfaction lives in building long chains, weaving up and down through runs of consecutive cards before you're forced to draw. Each level is a small puzzle of how long you can sustain that chain before the board stops cooperating. The 400 main solitaire levels are layered with board obstacles that arrive gradually: locks, chains, seaweed, and more blocking cards you need to reach. The pacing here is genuinely good. Nothing feels cheap, and the Normal and Hard difficulty modes add meaningful tension for players who want to chase three-star clears, while Relaxed mode strips the pressure entirely for sessions you just want to wind down with. The 18 bonus solitaire variants, ranging from familiar names like Klondike, Spider, and Freecell to more unusual layouts, open up as you progress through the map, so the game keeps offering you something new across a very long play time. Completionists who hunted every achievement in similar entries in the series have logged forty to fifty hours, sometimes more. The 100-level Mahjong bonus mode is a full second game's worth of content sitting quietly alongside the solitaire, which is either a blessing or a thing you never touch depending on your disposition. I find it a lovely palate cleanser. The presentation is where Suricate lets themselves feel a little handcrafted. The ten aquascapes you restore piece by piece using emeralds collected in levels are genuinely pretty, and watching a scene fill in with coral and fish over many sessions gives the grind a satisfying visual shape. The soundtrack sits in that soft, ambient register that solitaire games live or die by: not intrusive, slightly ethereal, the kind of music that doesn't demand attention but holds the atmosphere together when you let it. Fish Quests unlock decorative sea creatures that populate your built scenes, which adds a low-stakes collector loop that works nicely without ever feeling like a demand on your time. The honest critique is that Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire does not innovate. Community players who have spent time with earlier entries in the series will recognize every system here. The card-chain solitaire formula, the castle-building reward loop, the Mahjong bonus, the variant unlocks: it is all familiar territory. If you bounced off a previous Jewel Match title, this one will not convert you. Some players have also noted that the Supersize levels, which are extra-large board layouts, drag noticeably, and failing a long Supersize level after several minutes of effort can sting. The Challenge levels court a luck element that not everyone appreciates. These are real friction points, not invented ones. For the player who wants a generous, low-stress solitaire experience with a beautiful aesthetic wrapper and enough content to last weeks of casual sessions, this Collector's Edition delivers exactly what it promises with very little fuss. It is a game that respects your time without apologizing for being a card game. Rare quality in a crowded genre. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Higher-Lower SolitaireAquascape BuilderChain CombosFish Collector LoopMahjong Bonus ModeLong-Session CasualScene RestorationMulti-Difficulty

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 7.0
Storage
282 MB available space
Graphics
64MB VRAM
Processor
1GHz
Sound Card
Any

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Suricate Software
Publisher
Grey Alien Games
Release Date
Nov 7, 2019

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Price History

2026-06-071.13(lowest)

More from Suricate Software

Frequently asked questions about Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition

Where can I buy Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition cheapest?

Compare Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition available on?

Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition is available on PC.

When was Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition released?

Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition was released on 7 November 2019.

Who developed Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition?

Jewel Match Atlantis Solitaire - Collector's Edition was developed by Suricate Software and published by Grey Alien Games.