Complete rules, setup guide, and winning strategies for this same-suit stacking predecessor to FreeCell.
Baker’s Game is a challenging solitaire card game invented by C.L. Baker in the 1960s. It is the direct ancestor of FreeCell, sharing the same layout of 4 free cells, 4 foundations, and 8 cascades. The critical difference is that Baker’s Game requires same-suit stacking on the tableau instead of alternating colors.
This single rule change transforms the game. Where FreeCell is solvable 99.99% of the time, Baker’s Game is winnable in only about 75% of deals. The same-suit constraint drastically reduces the number of valid moves at any point, demanding careful planning and deep strategic thinking.
Baker’s Game uses a standard 52-card deck dealt as follows:
The layout is identical to FreeCell — every card is visible from the start, making Baker’s Game a perfect-information game with no hidden cards.
There are four foundation piles, one for each suit. Each foundation builds up by suit from Ace to King:
A♥ → 2♥ → 3♥ → ... → Q♥ → K♥
You win when all 52 cards have been moved to the foundations. Cards on foundations are permanent and cannot be moved back to the tableau or free cells.
This is the defining rule of Baker’s Game. On the tableau cascades, you build down by the same suit only. For example:
You can move a properly sequenced group of same-suit cards as a unit, provided you have enough empty free cells and cascades to support the move. The maximum number of cards you can move equals (1 + empty free cells) × 2^(empty cascades).
Empty cascades can be filled with any card or valid same-suit sequence.
The 4 free cells serve as temporary storage. Each can hold exactly one card at a time. You can move any top card from a cascade into an empty free cell, and you can move a card from a free cell to a valid cascade position or to a foundation.
Free cells are your most precious resource in Baker’s Game. Because same-suit stacking limits your tableau moves so severely, free cells are often the only way to rearrange cards. Filling all 4 free cells usually leads to a deadlock.
Understanding the differences helps players transition between the two games:
| Feature | Baker’s Game | FreeCell |
|---|---|---|
| Tableau stacking | Same suit, descending | Alternating color, descending |
| Free cells | 4 | 4 |
| Cascades | 8 | 8 |
| Win rate | ~75% | ~99.99% |
| Difficulty | Very hard | Moderate |
| Empty cascade fill | Any card | Any card |
The only rule difference is how you build on the tableau. In FreeCell, you build down in alternating colors (red on black, black on red). In Baker's Game, you must build down by the same suit — for example, only the 9 of hearts can go on the 10 of hearts. This single change makes the game dramatically harder.
Approximately 75% of Baker's Game deals are solvable with perfect play, compared to FreeCell's 99.99%. The same-suit stacking constraint means many deals are simply impossible to solve regardless of skill.
Baker's Game has 4 free cells, the same as standard FreeCell. Each free cell can hold one card temporarily. Keeping free cells open is even more critical in Baker's Game because the same-suit constraint severely limits your ability to rearrange cards on the tableau.
Yes. Unlike some solitaire variants that restrict empty columns to Kings only, Baker's Game allows any card or valid same-suit sequence to be placed in an empty cascade. Empty cascades are extremely valuable and should be used strategically.
Baker's Game was invented by C.L. Baker in the 1960s and is considered the direct predecessor to FreeCell. Paul Alfille later modified the rules to use alternating-color stacking instead of same-suit stacking, creating FreeCell as we know it today. The change made the game far more accessible.
You can move a sequence of cards that are built down by the same suit as a group. The number of cards you can move at once depends on the number of empty free cells and empty cascades available — the formula is (1 + empty free cells) × 2^(empty cascades). For example, with 2 empty free cells and 1 empty cascade, you can move up to 6 cards.
The most important strategy is to keep free cells and cascades open as long as possible. Focus on building same-suit sequences, prioritize uncovering Aces and low cards, and avoid mixing suits on the tableau. Plan several moves ahead because the same-suit constraint means you have far fewer valid moves than in FreeCell.
Put these rules into practice — play Baker's Game online for free.
Advanced strategies and techniques for winning more Baker's Game deals.
Another same-suit variant with 8 free cells for extra flexibility.
Learn the rules of the alternating-color version that Baker's Game inspired.