Baker's Game

Baker's Game

A partially-completed game of Baker's Game on PySolFC
Alternative Names Brain Jam
Named Variants FreeCell
Deck Single 52-card
Family Freecell
See also Glossary of solitaire

Baker's Game is a Patience game (or card Solitaire game) similar to FreeCell (and predating it) which differs in the fact that sequences are built by suit, instead of by alternate color.[1]

Contents

History

One of the oldest ancestors of Baker's Game is Eight Off. In the June 1968 edition of Scientific American, Martin Gardner described in his "Mathematical Games" column a game by C. L. Baker, that is now known as Baker's Game. Gardner wrote "The game was taught to Baker by his father, who in turn learned it from an Englishman during the 1920's".[2]

The description of Baker's Game in the "Mathematical Games" column inspired Paul Alfille to create FreeCell and he coding it for the PLATO educational computer system, which ended up becoming more popular than Baker's Game.[3]

Rules

(Adapted from the FreeCell's article Rules.).

Construction and layout:

Building during play:

Moves:

Victory:

[4]

Statistics

Freecell Solver, a solver for some variants of Patience game, including Baker's Game[5], was ran on the first 10 million deals of 4 freecell Baker's Game based on the Microsoft FreeCell deals, in order to collect statistics.[6]. The solver was ran using a preset that guarantees an accurate verdict. Out of the 10 million deals, 7,431,962 were solvable (making for an average win rate of 74.3%), with a maximal iterations count of 893,777 iterations. The remaining unsolved deals yielded a maximal iterations count of 2,568,038 iterations.

Implementations

Automated Solvers

Some automated solvers of card solitaire are capable of solving Baker's Games:

References

  1. ^ Freecell FAQ and Links
  2. ^ Gardner, Martin (June 1968). "Mathematical Games". Scientific American 218 (6): p. 114. 
  3. ^ Kaye, Ellen (October 17, 2002). "One Down, 31,999 to Go: Surrendering to a Solitary Obsession". New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F05E6DE143DF934A25753C1A9649C8B63. 
  4. ^ Baker's Game's Rules on Pretty Good Solitaire
  5. ^ Freecell Solver's features list
  6. ^ fc-solve-discuss : Message: “Solving Statistics for the first 10 Million MS-Freecell-like Baker's Game Deals”
  7. ^ Freecell FAQ
  8. ^ List of AisleRiot games
  9. ^ Pretty Good Solitaire List of Games
  10. ^ PySolFC - Game Rules
  11. ^ World of Solitaire
  12. ^ Freecell FAQ
  13. ^ Freecell Solver’s Features List
  14. ^ Berto's Brain Jam Page