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Accordion (card game)

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This article is about the game Accordion. To know more about the musical instrument, see the Accordion article.

Accordion is a solitaire game using one deck of playing cards. The object is to compress the entire deck into one pile like an accordion.

There are two variants of the game in terms of how the game begins.

File:Accordion v2.jpg
A game of Accordion in progress. This screenshot of the Patience Pack solitaire program shows the version where cards are spread out.
File:Accordion v1.jpg
A game of Accordion in progress. This screenshot of Solitaire Deluxe by Interplay shows the version where cards are laid out one at a time.

In one variant, the cards are laid out one by one and are immediately put into play if possible. The number of cards to be laid out range from just one card to how many cards the width of the table can allow (usually a second or third row is constructed in the process). While practical, it also allows an element of surprise as the player does not know the next card to be dealt until all possible plays are exhausted.

In another variant, the cards are spread out in one line. While this variant allows for some tactics to be applied, it can prove to be cumbersome when played with a real deck. This variant of the game is implemented in BVS Solitaire Collection and Patience Pack.

No matter the layout variant, the game is the same. A pile can be moved on top of another pile immediately to its left or separated to its left by two piles if the top cards of each pile have the same suit or rank. Gaps left behind are filled by moving piles to the left.

Here's an example:

5♠ 6♠ 10 5 K♣

According to this example, either 6♠ or 5 can be placed over 5♠. These are the only allowable moves.

The game is won when all cards are compressed into one pile. But since achieving this is next to impossible when cards are dealt one at a time, Alfred Sheinwold mentions in his book 101 Best Family Card Games (ISBN 0-8069-8635-2) that it is considered a win when there are five piles or less at the end of the game.

When the cards are dealt out all at once, the game can be won nearly every time: See How I learned to play (the) Accordion