1 Suit vs 2 Suits vs 4 Suits
Same Spider rules—different card mixes. Pick a mode that matches your mood, then track Best Scores and Stats separately for each difficulty on SpiderImp.
| Mode | Best for | Feel |
|---|---|---|
| 1 suit | Beginners, kids, seniors, calm practice | Easiest—learn layout and empty-column tactics |
| 2 suits | Everyday sessions and Daily Challenge | More planning; still approachable |
| 4 suits | Classic hard Spider fans | Full two-deck mix; deepest challenge |
Spider Solitaire 1 suit
Often all one suit (for example spades). Almost every descending stack is same-suit, so group moves stay available and you can focus on uncovering cards and protecting empty columns. Ideal first mode if you are learning how to play.
Spider Solitaire 2 suits
Typically two suits (for example spades and hearts). You still build King-to-Ace same-suit runs, but mixed temporary builds appear more often. A sweet spot for lunch-break play and Daily Challenge races.
Spider Solitaire 4 suits
The classic hard mode with a full two-deck mix. Same-suit runs are harder to assemble; empty columns and careful dealing matter more. Best when you want a longer, tougher solitaire session and sharper move counts on the Best Scores board.
Scoring note
On SpiderImp, wins are ranked by moves (fewer is better), then time. Each difficulty keeps its own local Best Scores and Statistics—switching modes does not mix the boards.