Cribbage Solitaire

Cribbage Solitaire (also known as Cribbage Patience) is a solitaire card game using a deck of 52 playing cards. It is based on the game of five-card cribbage, also known as the "old game," and is one of many solitaire card games based on those played by at least two players, best known of which is Poker Solitaire.

First, twelve cards are dealt into two hands as if there are two players. The player looks at the first hand and discards two cards to contribute to an area known as the crib. The player then looks at the second hand and contributes two more cards from that hand to the crib. A thirteenth card, the starter, is then dealt. The starter combines with the crib and the two hands to each form a five-card cribbage hand, much the same way as the community cards in Texas Hold 'Em Poker.

Points are scored according to how the hand/crib is combined with the starter. Hands are scored like in actual cribbage and the combinations below may occur more than once in just one hand:

Points are added from the two hands and from the crib and given a running total. This makes a set or deal. The cards used are then discarded and a new set of 13 cards are dealt. Since each deal uses a fourth of the entire deck, a game of Cribbage Solitaire is composed of four such deals. The points from the four deals are added up into a final total for the entire game. The winning final score can range from 101 to 121 (the points needed to win a game of regular cribbage) according to the player's preference.

The rules stated above are those written by Peter Arnold in his book Card Games for One (ISBN 0-600-60727-5). In SolSuite's version of the game, only nine cards are dealt instead of thirteen: the six cards in the hand, the first two cards of the crib, and the starter. The player contributes two cards from his hand to the crib. Points are then scored the same way as mentioned above (except for "his heels"). The starter is then placed at the bottom of the deck, so that a total of six hands with cribs and starters are played, followed by one hand without a crib or a starter. The winning score in this version is considered to be 81.

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