Compare The Zachtronics Solitaire Collection prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Zachtronics. Published by Zachtronics. Released on 9/6/2022. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Casual, Indie.

Eight solitaire variants that each feel like a tiny, finished game with its own rules, aesthetic, and soundtrack. Skip this and you're leaving the best card collection on PC sitting untouched.

I've lost more quiet evenings to this collection than I'd like to admit, and every single one was worth it. What Zachtronics quietly built across their run as a studio, one solitaire minigame tucked inside each major release, turns out to form something cohesive and genuinely astonishing when gathered in one place. These aren't reskins. Each of the eight variants carries its own logic, its own visual identity, and its own sense of what "winning" even means. The breadth is the real story. Shenzhen Solitaire twists the FreeCell formula through a three-color mahjong-tile deck, so even if you're a seasoned FreeCell player, your muscle memory won't save you on the first few deals. Sawayama Solitaire reimagines classic Klondike with full tableau visibility, which sounds like a mercy but actually transforms it into something more strategic and tighter. Cluj Solitaire gives you a sanctioned cheating move, letting you park a card anywhere you want, so long as you use that freedom carefully enough not to collapse your own options. Kabufuda Solitaire locks extra free cells behind completed sets, creating a compounding pressure that punishes impatience. Proletariat's Patience plays an asymmetric game where suit-grouping and alternating-color stacking coexist on the same board. Cribbage Solitaire scores runs and pairs against a Cold War aircraft recognition deck, which is one of those small Zachtronics details that makes you smile and then immediately forget because the scoring has captured your full attention. Sigmar's Garden steps outside cards entirely for a hexagonal alchemical tile-matching puzzle from Opus Magnum. And Fortune's Foundation, the collection-exclusive built around a tarot deck, may be the hardest of the lot, with bi-directional stacking and a free cell that blocks card removal if you use it carelessly, demanding the kind of long-term positional thinking that chess players will recognize immediately. The presentation does serious work. Each game has its own fully distinct audiovisual design, and the soundtrack, across all eight entries, has absolutely no reason to go as hard as it does. The menu itself is quietly beautiful, and Zach Barth's own written notes on each game's origins are there for anyone who wants to understand the design decisions behind them. That layer of intentionality is rare in a collection release, and it shows. The 4K artwork upgrade is clean and readable, which matters a lot when you're scanning a dense tableau. Fair warnings: no Steam Deck controller support has been a real complaint from players, and text can read small if you're not at a proper desktop distance. Cribbage Solitaire will feel thin if you have zero affection for cribbage scoring. And if you come in expecting a breezy time, Fortune's Foundation will correct that assumption fairly fast. These are genuinely thoughtful puzzle games wearing solitaire's clothes, and a few of them have real teeth. This is also, quietly, a farewell artifact. Zachtronics closed up shop around this release, and the care put into packaging these minigames says something. The studio couldn't just let them scatter across old game pages forever. Kai, Scout Team

The Zachtronics Solitaire Collection
CasualIndie

The Zachtronics Solitaire Collection

Sep 6, 2022Zachtronics
GamerScout Says

Eight solitaire variants that each feel like a tiny, finished game with its own rules, aesthetic, and soundtrack. Skip this and you're leaving the best card collection on PC sitting untouched.

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About The Zachtronics Solitaire Collection

I've lost more quiet evenings to this collection than I'd like to admit, and every single one was worth it. What Zachtronics quietly built across their run as a studio, one solitaire minigame tucked inside each major release, turns out to form something cohesive and genuinely astonishing when gathered in one place. These aren't reskins. Each of the eight variants carries its own logic, its own visual identity, and its own sense of what "winning" even means. The breadth is the real story. Shenzhen Solitaire twists the FreeCell formula through a three-color mahjong-tile deck, so even if you're a seasoned FreeCell player, your muscle memory won't save you on the first few deals. Sawayama Solitaire reimagines classic Klondike with full tableau visibility, which sounds like a mercy but actually transforms it into something more strategic and tighter. Cluj Solitaire gives you a sanctioned cheating move, letting you park a card anywhere you want, so long as you use that freedom carefully enough not to collapse your own options. Kabufuda Solitaire locks extra free cells behind completed sets, creating a compounding pressure that punishes impatience. Proletariat's Patience plays an asymmetric game where suit-grouping and alternating-color stacking coexist on the same board. Cribbage Solitaire scores runs and pairs against a Cold War aircraft recognition deck, which is one of those small Zachtronics details that makes you smile and then immediately forget because the scoring has captured your full attention. Sigmar's Garden steps outside cards entirely for a hexagonal alchemical tile-matching puzzle from Opus Magnum. And Fortune's Foundation, the collection-exclusive built around a tarot deck, may be the hardest of the lot, with bi-directional stacking and a free cell that blocks card removal if you use it carelessly, demanding the kind of long-term positional thinking that chess players will recognize immediately. The presentation does serious work. Each game has its own fully distinct audiovisual design, and the soundtrack, across all eight entries, has absolutely no reason to go as hard as it does. The menu itself is quietly beautiful, and Zach Barth's own written notes on each game's origins are there for anyone who wants to understand the design decisions behind them. That layer of intentionality is rare in a collection release, and it shows. The 4K artwork upgrade is clean and readable, which matters a lot when you're scanning a dense tableau. Fair warnings: no Steam Deck controller support has been a real complaint from players, and text can read small if you're not at a proper desktop distance. Cribbage Solitaire will feel thin if you have zero affection for cribbage scoring. And if you come in expecting a breezy time, Fortune's Foundation will correct that assumption fairly fast. These are genuinely thoughtful puzzle games wearing solitaire's clothes, and a few of them have real teeth. This is also, quietly, a farewell artifact. Zachtronics closed up shop around this release, and the care put into packaging these minigames says something. The studio couldn't just let them scatter across old game pages forever. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:indieCard Game CollectionThoughtful PuzzleReplayableDistinct AestheticsOriginal MechanicsRelaxing-but-ChallengingMinigame AnthologyFarewell Release

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows Vista / 7 / 8 / 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
750 MB available space
Graphics
1366 x 768
Processor
2.0 GHz

Recommended

OS
Windows Vista / 7 / 8 / 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
750 MB available space
Graphics
3840 x 2160
Processor
2.0 GHz

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Zachtronics
Publisher
Zachtronics
Release Date
Sep 6, 2022

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