Spidersolitaire Exe Mui

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Spider Solitaire
Developer(s)Microsoft
Operating systemMicrosoft Windows
Replaced byMicrosoft Solitaire Collection
TypeGames
Websitewindowshelp.microsoft.com/Windows/en-US/help/0785850c-efb8-4ccc-8a45-688913eec1231033.mspx
Microsoft Solitaire Collection on Windows 10, in Spider mode

Spider Solitaire, also known as Microsoft Spider Solitaire[1] (Spider in the About box in some versions), is a solitairecard game that is included in Microsoft Windows.[2] It is a version of Spider. As of 2005, it was the most played game on Windows PCs, surpassing the shorter and less challenging Klondike-based Windows Solitaire.[3]

Hampir semua teman2 pengguna windows tentunya sudah memainkan games bawaan windows seperti: Solitaire, Spider Solitaire, FreeCell, Minesweeper, Mahjong, Chess, Hearts dan Purble Place, dulu waktu kita memainkan game Freecell agar langsung menang cukup dengan menekan tombol “Crtl+Shift+F10″ dan “Alt+Shift+2″ untuk langsung menang di game Solitare. Jun 09, 2007  I have Vista Home Basic and accidentally deleted 'spidersolitaire.exe.mui' Where can I download this file since extracting it from the free tech upgrade disk is.

The game was first included as part of Windows 98's Microsoft Plus! package[4] and has been since featured on most subsequent versions of Windows. Spider Solitaire was not included in Windows 2000,[5] but was added to Windows ME[6] and later on Windows XP;[7] the game gained popularity subsequent to its inclusion in the latter.[3]Windows Vista again saw a new version,[8] which was mainly unchanged in Windows 7.[9] Finally, Windows 8 has another updated version available in the Windows Store as part of Microsoft Solitaire Collection but not bundled with the operating system.[10]Windows 10 has the Microsoft Solitaire Collection app updated and bundled with the OS.

Gameplay[edit]

The game is played with two decks of cards for a total of 104 cards. Fifty-four of the cards are laid out horizontally in ten columns with only the top card showing. The remaining fifty cards are laid out in the lower right hand corner in five piles of ten with no cards showing.[11]

In the horizontal columns a card may be moved to any other card in the column as long as it is in descending numerical sequence. For example, a six of hearts may be moved to a seven of any suit. However, a sequence of cards can only be moved if they are all of the same suit in numerical descending order. For example, a six and seven of hearts may be moved to an eight of any suit, but a six of hearts and seven of clubs cannot be moved together. Moving the top card in a column allows the topmost hidden card to be turned over. This card then enters into the play. Other cards can be placed on it, and it can be moved to other cards in a sequence or to an empty column.

The object of the game is to uncover all the hidden cards and by moving cards from one column to another to place cards in sequential order from King to Ace using the fewest moves. Each final sequence must be all of the same suit. Once a complete sequence is achieved the cards are removed from the table and 100 points are added to the score. Once a player has made all the moves possible with the current card layout, the player draws a new row of cards from one of the piles of ten in the right lower hand corner by clicking on the cards. Each of the ten cards in this draw lands face up on each of the ten horizontal columns and the player then proceeds to place these in such a way to create a sequence of cards all in one suit.

Features[edit]

There are three levels of difficulty in Spider Solitaire: Beginner (one suit), Intermediate (two suits), and Advanced (four suits).[12]

Spider Solitaire has an 'undo' feature that allows moves to be retracted. Any number of moves can be retracted, back to the last non-retractable move, but each 'undo' subtracts one from the score.

To aid the player, the key H (M in earlier versions) will highlight possible moves. The player should not become overly reliant on the H key, however, because it will indicate only the most obvious moves and not the subtle moves needed to win the game. The player can also undo previous moves and try again. Windows keeps track of scores for the player's reference; these may be viewed by going to Game and then Statistics. In Windows 7, these scores appear in the Games Explorer by clicking the game and selecting the Statistics tab in the Preview Pane. There are two measures of performance in Spider Solitaire: number of games won and highest score. In a certain sense these two measures are negatively correlated: maximizing games won may yield lower scores per game and vice versa.

The final score in a Spider Solitaire game is calculated as follows. The initial score is 500 and every move subtracts one from the score. Using the “undo” feature also subtracts one point from the score. Every time the player is able to place an entire sequence of cards of the same suit in order (from kings down to ace), 100 points are added to the score. There is a total of eight such sequences in the game yielding a maximum achievable number of 800. Therefore, in a winning game the total score is 800 plus 500 minus the number of moves and 'undo's.[12]

References[edit]

  1. ^'Spider Solitaire May Not Display Properly When You Drag Cards'. Support. Microsoft. September 28, 2004. Archived from the original on January 16, 2007.
  2. ^Beggesen, Mark. 'Spider Solitaire - Microsoft Windows Vista Games'. About.com. p. 9. Archived from the original on March 11, 2009.
  3. ^ abTrefry, Gregory (2010). Casual game design: designing play for the gamer in all of us. Amsterdam: Morgan Kaufmann/Elsevier. pp. 107–108. ISBN9780123749536.
  4. ^Thurrott, Paul (June 25, 1998). 'Plus! for Windows 98 Review'. Supersite for Windows. Penton.
  5. ^Ford, Jerry Lee Jr. (2000). Upgrading to Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional: A Migration Guide for Windows 98 and Windows NT Users. Lincoln, NE: iUniverse.com, Inc. p. 90. ISBN0595148042. Retrieved January 8, 2013.
  6. ^'List of Games That Are Included with Windows'. Support. Microsoft. September 28, 2004. Archived from the original on January 16, 2007.
  7. ^'How To Add or Remove Games in Windows XP'. Support. Microsoft. July 15, 2004. Archived from the original on February 11, 2004.
  8. ^Yu, James (July 24, 2006). 'A Look at Windows Vista Installed Games'. GameSpot. CBS Interactive.
  9. ^Thurrott, Paul (October 6, 2010). 'Windows 7 Review, Part 10: Bundled Applications'. Supersite for Windows. Penton. Retrieved 2013-07-14.
  10. ^'Microsoft Solitaire Collection'. App Store. Microsoft. Retrieved 2013-07-14.
  11. ^'Spider Solitaire: how to play'. Windows. Microsoft. Archived from the original on November 23, 2009.
  12. ^ abSpider Solitaire Help
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Microsoft_Spider_Solitaire&oldid=934672193'

Spider Solitaire Rules

Spidersolitaire Exe Mui

Objective

Spider Solitaire is a solitaire game where the objective is to order all the cards in descending runs from King down to Ace in the same suit. Once a run has been completed, for example King of clubs down to Ace of clubs, then the whole run will be removed from the table. Once the table is completely empty the game has been won.

Setup

Spider Solitaire is played with two full decks, 104 cards. At the beginning 54 of the cards are divided between 10 tableaus, the first 4 tableaus have 6 cards each, the other 6 tableaus have 5 cards each. The top card of each tableau is turned face up, the others are face down. The remaining 50 cards are placed in a stock at the top of the screen.

Valid moves

A card can always be moved onto a card that is one higher in rank. You can for example move a 7 of clubs and put it on an 8 of clubs, or an 8 of hearts, diamonds or spades. However, even though you can move cards onto other cards in a different suit, the objective of the game is to create runs in the same suit, so a run will only be removed from the table if it's all in the same suit, a full run in different suits doesn't do anything for you. (Although it can be useful to move cards onto other suits just to get them out of the way).

You can move multiple cards together if they are all part of a run in the same suit. E.g. if you have 8 of clubs, 7 of clubs, 6 of clubs, then you can click the 8 and move them all together onto a 9 of any suit. However if you have 8 of clubs, 7 of hearts, 6 of diamonds, then you can't move them all together, only the top card.

If a tableau is empty then any card or partial run is allowed to be moved onto it.

A full run does not have to be the only thing on a tableau to be removed. For example, a tableau might have three facedown cards and then a full run from King to Ace in the same suit and then the run would disappear, and the three facedown cards would remain.

Adding cards from the stock

When there are no more moves that can be made in the tableaus then you can click on the stock in the upper left corner. Imagenomic realgrain v2.0 build 2001 incl serial - programs. That will move 10 cards from the stock onto the tableaus, one card onto each tableau. Try not to do this until you are sure you have no other moves to make. It is required that there is at least one card in each tableau when the stock is clicked. If there is an empty tableau on the table you must first move one or more cards onto it before you can click on the stock.

Scoring

You start with 500 points. For each move you make one point gets subtracted. For each run you remove from the table you'll get a 100 extra points. Example: if you've managed to make three full runs in 70 moves you'll have 500-70+3*100 = 730 points.

Difficulty

The game can be played in three different modes, beginner, intermediate and advanced. In beginner mode there is only one suit (spades), in intermediate mode there are two (spades and hearts) and in advanced mode there are all four suits. There are the same number of cards, 104, in all modes.