Double the suit complexity — the authentic Spider challenge.
Spider Solitaire 2 Suits ramps up the classic game by introducing both spades and hearts into the deck. While you can still stack any descending sequence regardless of suit, only complete same-suit King-to-Ace runs score and get removed to the foundations. Managing two suits requires deeper planning and careful column management — the definitive Spider Solitaire experience.
"2 Suit Spider is exactly what I was looking for — challenging enough to keep me thinking for a long time, but not so hard it feels impossible. This browser version is perfect."
— Rachel M., Toronto"The drag and drop is smooth on both desktop and my tablet. I love that it loads instantly with no sign-up nonsense. The 2 Suit mode is genuinely satisfying to crack."
— James K., DublinSpider Solitaire 2 Suits uses two standard decks (104 cards total) split evenly between spades and hearts. The goal is to build eight complete same-suit King-to-Ace sequences and move them to the foundations.
Cards are dealt to 10 tableau columns: the first 4 columns get 6 cards each, the remaining 6 get 5 cards each (54 cards total). Only the top card of each column starts face-up. The remaining 50 cards sit in the stock, dealt in groups of 10.
The key difference in 2-Suit mode: mixed-suit sequences are legal to build and move, but they will never be removed to a foundation. You must eventually sort them into pure same-suit runs of 13. This forces more deliberate column management and makes the game significantly harder than 1-Suit mode.
Yes. In Spider, you can move any face-up descending sequence onto a card one rank higher, regardless of suit. However, only a pure same-suit K-to-A run of 13 cards will be automatically cleared to the foundation.
You can deal from the stock as long as all 10 tableau columns have at least one card. You cannot deal if any column is empty. This is the standard Spider Solitaire rule.
You can undo up to 60 previous moves. Each undo step restores the full board to its state before that move. There is no score penalty for using undo.
Yes — completely free, no account required, no downloads. Works in any modern browser on desktop or mobile.