How to play FreeCell - Card Game on Mac

Game summary

[Grand Update] Prevent Stale Your Mac OS and Update the whole UI, make it more clean and clear; FreeCell is a solitaire-based card game played with a 52-card standard deck. It is fundamentally different from most solitaire games in that nearly all deals can be solved. Although software implementations vary, most versions label the hands with a number (derived from the random number seed used to generate the hand). Rules Construction and layout: * One standard 52-card deck is used. * There are four open cells and four open foundations. Some alternate rules use between one to ten cells. * Cards are dealt into eight cascades, four of which comprise seven cards and four of which comprise six. Some alternate rules will use between four to ten cascades. Building during play: * The top card of each cascade begins a tableau. * Tableaux must be built down by alternating colors. * Foundations are built up by suit. Moves: * Any cell card or top card of any cascade may be moved to build on a tableau, or moved to an empty cell, an empty cascade, or its foundation. * Complete or partial tableaus may be moved to build on existing tableaus, or moved to empty cascades, by recursively placing and removing cards through intermediate locations. While computer implementations often show this motion, players using physical decks typically move the tableau at once. Victory: * The game is won after all cards are moved to their foundation piles. For games with the standard layout (four open cells and eight cascades) most games are easily solved. Supported Operations: * Tap one column and tap another column, move the cards from the first column to second column if possible; * Double Tap on the column's last card to move it to buffer area, if possible; * Drag cards from one column to another column, if possible; * Auto throw, cards will be throw to recycle automatically, if possible; * Drag from recycle to columns to restore the recycled card, if possible; With Auto-throw, it is
First released: Jul 2011

Play FreeCell - Card Game on Mac with Parallels (virtualized)

The easiest way to play FreeCell - Card Game on a Mac is through Parallels, which allows you to virtualize a Windows machine on Macs. The setup is very easy and it works for Apple Silicon Macs as well as for older Intel-based Macs.

Parallels supports the latest version of DirectX and OpenGL, allowing you to play the latest PC games on any Mac. The latest version of DirectX is up to 20% faster.

Our favorite feature of Parallels Desktop is that when you turn off your virtual machine, all the unused disk space gets returned to your main OS, thus minimizing resource waste (which used to be a problem with virtualization).

FreeCell - Card Game installation steps for Mac

Step 1
Go to Parallels.com and download the latest version of the software.
Step 2
Follow the installation process and make sure you allow Parallels in your Mac’s security preferences (it will prompt you to do so).
Step 3
When prompted, download and install Windows 10. The download is around 5.7GB. Make sure you give it all the permissions that it asks for.
Step 4
Once Windows is done installing, you are ready to go. All that’s left to do is install FreeCell - Card Game like you would on any PC.
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