If there are no available moves, or you choose not to make any moves, you get dealt an extra card onto each of the 10 piles of cards. Secondly, you can stack cards of the same suit on each other in descending number order. First, you can play normal solitaire rules and stack black on red or red on black in descending number order. With each card, you have two options of how to play it. Once all the cards are gone, the game is won. Once this happens, that whole set is removed. The basic aim is to get the 13 cards of one suit in order from king to ace stacked on top of each other. The cards bear a spider design and the layout looks much cleaner with more graphical depth. Straight away, Spider Solitaire looks move visually appealing that its more simplistic cousin. Spider Solitaire changes the game by adding additional levels of complexity as well making sure that each and every level is winnable with the right strategy. Unless you get really stuck into the Vegas mode, normal Windows solitaire rapidly becomes boring as it becomes obvious that it is all to do with the luck of the deal rather than any skill on behalf of the player as to whether the game gets completed or not.