Proven strategies for one of solitaire's most punishing variants — from row scanning techniques to cascade planning and knowing when to fold.
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The Core Strategy
Accordion Solitaire strategy centers on three principles: scan the entire row before every move, prioritize moves that trigger chain reactions, and restart quickly when the deal is dead. With all 52 cards dealt face-up in a single row and only leftward moves allowed, your options are severely limited on any given turn. The game rewards patience and pattern recognition over raw calculation. Most deals are unsolvable, so efficient deal selection is as important as move selection.
Scanning the Full Row Before Moving
The single most important habit in Accordion Solitaire is resisting the urge to make the first match you see. Unlike FreeCell or Klondike, where you have multiple columns and foundations offering many move options, Accordion gives you a single row with a handful of valid moves at most. Making the wrong move first can eliminate a better move that was available elsewhere in the row.
Before every move, scan the entire row from left to right. Identify every valid match — both adjacent (one position left) and three-position matches. Write them down mentally or count them. Only after you have a complete picture of your options should you choose which move to execute. This discipline is what separates players who occasionally compress the row significantly from those who stall after a few moves.
Count all available moves first. Before touching any card, tally every valid match in the row. Most positions have 2-5 valid moves; knowing them all prevents tunnel vision.
Check both match types for every card. Each card can potentially match the card one position to its left AND the card three positions to its left. Always check both — missing a three-position match is a common beginner mistake.
Evaluate the downstream effect of each move. When a card moves leftward, the cards to its right shift one position left. This changes the neighbor relationships for every card after the moved card. Visualize the new row before committing.
Re-scan after every move. Because card positions shift after each move, new matches appear that did not exist before. Never assume the next move is the same one you planned — the row has changed.
Key insight: Accordion is a game of information, not hidden cards. All 52 cards are visible from the start. The challenge is not uncovering information but processing the chain of consequences from each possible move. Slow, thorough scanning is your greatest advantage.
Right-to-Left vs Left-to-Right Analysis
While scanning the row for matches, the direction you analyze from matters more than you might expect. Left-to-right scanning is the natural approach — it mirrors reading direction and follows the row from beginning to end. But right-to-left analysis often reveals superior move sequences.
The reason is positional math. When you make a move near the right end of the row, it shifts fewer downstream cards (because fewer cards exist to the right). When you make a move near the left end, it shifts many downstream cards, potentially disrupting matches you were planning to make later. This means right-end moves are “safer” — they cause less positional disruption.
Start analysis from the right. Right-side moves preserve left-side match relationships. If you see a match at position 45 and another at position 10, executing the right-side match first preserves the left-side match (since it is unaffected by removals to its right).
Left-side moves cascade unpredictably. A move near position 5 shifts every card from position 6 onward. This can create new matches but can also destroy planned ones. Use left-side moves only when they trigger a clear chain reaction.
Independent moves can go in any order. If two matches involve cards that are far apart and neither depends on the other, order does not matter. But when in doubt, prefer right-to-left execution.
Exception: cascade-starting moves. If a left-side move clearly triggers a chain of 3+ subsequent moves, it can be worth the positional disruption. Cascades are the primary way to compress the row dramatically.
Mental shortcut: Think of the row like a line of dominoes. Pushing a domino on the right topples fewer pieces than pushing one on the left. When you want stability, work from the right. When you want disruption (to create new matches), work from the left.
Prioritizing Three-Position Matches Over Adjacent
In Accordion Solitaire, a card can move one position to the left (adjacent match) or three positions to the left (three-position match), provided the destination card shares the same suit or rank. While both moves compress the row by one card, they have very different strategic implications. Three-position matches are generally more powerful and should be preferred when both options are available.
The reason is cascading potential. When you execute a three-position match, the moved card lands in a new neighborhood where it may match its new neighbors. It has jumped over two cards, creating fresh adjacency relationships. An adjacent match, by contrast, merely places the card next to what was already its second neighbor — a smaller positional shift that generates fewer new opportunities.
Three-position moves create more disruption. The card jumps further left, and the two cards that were between it and its destination shift right in relative terms. This creates more new neighbor pairs and thus more potential matches.
Adjacent moves are conservative. They change fewer relationships and are less likely to open up cascades. Use them when a three-position match is not available or when the adjacent match directly enables a known chain.
Both are available? Choose three-position first. If a card can match both one-left and three-left, try the three-position move. The adjacent move may still be available after, but the reverse is not always true — the three-position target may shift away after an adjacent move elsewhere.
Exception: when adjacent enables a known cascade. If the adjacent match places the card where it can immediately be matched again (creating a two-move cascade), it may outperform a three-position match that leads to a dead end. Always evaluate the next 2-3 moves, not just the immediate one.
Move TypePositional ShiftCascade Potential
Adjacent (1 left)Small — one new neighbor pairLow — minimal disruption
Adjacent into cascadeSmall, but triggers chainVery high — compounds quickly
Three-position into cascadeLarge and triggers chainMaximum — best possible outcome
Pro tip: When you find a three-position match, before executing it, check what card is currently at the destination's own one-left and three-left positions. If the moved card could match those too, you have found a cascade. These multi-step chains are the key to compressing the row from 52 cards toward the goal of one pile.
Managing Chain Reactions and Cascades
Cascades — sequences of moves where each move creates the conditions for the next — are the engine of progress in Accordion Solitaire. A single move that compresses the row by one card is marginal. A cascade that compresses the row by 5-8 cards in succession is transformative. The best Accordion players do not just find individual matches; they construct cascades.
Unlike games such as Spider Solitaire where completing a full sequence removes cards, Accordion stacks cards into piles. When card A moves onto card B, the resulting pile takes on the identity of card A (the card that moved, now on top). This pile can then be moved again if it matches its new neighbor. Understanding this “top card identity” mechanic is essential for planning cascades.
Track the top card after each stack. When card A moves onto card B, the pile is now “card A” for matching purposes. Plan your cascade by following the top card identity through each successive move.
Cascades work best in clusters. Look for areas of the row where multiple cards share suits or ranks within a 4-6 card span. These clusters are where cascades are most likely to ignite.
Sacrifice a weak move to enable a cascade. Sometimes the best immediate move is not the highest-value move. A modest adjacent match that repositions a card to trigger a three-move cascade is far superior to a three-position match that leads nowhere.
Cascades near the left end are most valuable. Compressing the left side of the row reduces the total row length permanently and brings distant right-side cards into play sooner. A cascade at position 5 that removes 4 cards shifts the entire row 4 positions left.
Do not break a cascade prematurely. If you have identified a cascade chain, execute all moves in the chain before scanning for other opportunities. Interrupting a cascade with an unrelated move can shift card positions and destroy the remaining cascade steps.
Common mistake: Executing a cascade partially, then getting distracted by a newly visible match elsewhere in the row. Finish the cascade first. The new match will still exist after the cascade completes (and may even improve, as the row compresses further). Interrupting a cascade costs you the compounding benefit of sequential compression.
Rank vs Suit Matching Decisions
Every match in Accordion is based on either shared suit or shared rank. With 13 cards per suit and 4 cards per rank, suit matches are statistically more common in the row than rank matches. But frequency does not equal value. The strategic weight of each match type depends entirely on context — what the move enables and what it prevents.
Suit matches connect cards of the same suit regardless of rank. Because there are 13 cards per suit spread across the row, suit-based connections form natural “highways” — chains of same-suit cards that can cascade into each other. Rank matches connect cards of the same rank regardless of suit. With only 4 cards per rank, rank matches are rarer but can bridge between suit groups, connecting otherwise isolated sections of the row.
Suit matches are the backbone of cascades. Because there are more cards of any given suit in the row, suit matches are more likely to chain into subsequent moves. A hearts-on-hearts match may place the card next to another heart, enabling a follow-up.
Rank matches are bridges. When a cascade stalls because no suit match is available, a rank match can jump to a different suit and restart the chain. Think of rank matches as connectors between suit highways.
Prefer the match that leads to more moves. If a card can match by suit to its left neighbor or by rank to a card three positions left, choose whichever results in a top card that has more matching potential with its new neighbors. This requires looking 2-3 moves ahead.
Rank matches preserve suit diversity. Stacking cards of different suits via rank matches creates piles whose top card can potentially match multiple suits in the future. This flexibility can be valuable in the late game when the row is short and options are scarce.
Match TypeFrequencyStrategic Role
Suit match (same suit)Common — 13 cards per suitCascade fuel — chains same-suit runs
Rank match (same rank)Rare — 4 cards per rankBridge — connects different suit groups
Both availableUncommonEvaluate downstream — choose the deeper chain
Watch out: Do not default to suit matches simply because they are more common. A rank match that places your card next to two same-suit neighbors is far more powerful than a suit match that leads to a dead end. Always evaluate the destination neighborhood, not just the match criterion.
When to Accept a Loss and Restart
Accordion Solitaire has a win rate of roughly 2-5%. This means that for every 20-50 deals you attempt, you should expect to win only one. Unlike FreeCell where nearly every deal is solvable with perfect play, or Spider where skilled players win the majority of games, Accordion is a game where losing is the default outcome. Accepting this is essential for your sanity and your strategy.
Fast restarts are not a sign of impatience — they are optimal strategy. Time spent grinding through a clearly dead deal is time not spent finding a winnable one. The best Accordion players develop quick heuristics for identifying dead deals within the first 10-15 seconds of scanning the initial row.
Restart if the initial scan shows fewer than 3 moves. A starting row with only 1-2 valid matches rarely leads to significant compression. You need at least 3-4 initial moves to have a realistic chance of getting a cascade going.
Restart if no three-position matches exist at the start. Adjacent-only positions tend to stall quickly. The absence of three-position matches in the initial deal is a strong signal that the row will not compress well.
Restart if the row stalls below 40 cards. If you have compressed the row from 52 to, say, 42 cards and now have zero valid moves, the deal is dead. There is no stock to draw from, no reshuffling, no second chances. The game is over — start a new one.
Track your personal restart threshold. Some players restart after 5 seconds of scanning. Others give each deal 30 seconds. Find a threshold that keeps you engaged without wasting time. A good target: if you cannot compress the row below 35 cards within your first burst of moves, restart.
Do not chase sunk costs. Even if you have spent a minute carefully planning moves, if the row stalls, it stalls. The time you invested does not make the current deal more winnable. Restart and apply what you learned to the next deal.
Key insight: The best Accordion players treat the game as a two-phase process. Phase one is deal selection: rapidly scanning and restarting until you find a deal with cascade potential. Phase two is execution: carefully optimizing moves on a promising deal. Most of your time should be spent on phase two, which means phase one (restarting) should be fast and ruthless.
Quick Reference: Strategy Cheat Sheet
Scan the entire row before every move. Identify all valid matches — adjacent and three-position — before committing to any action.
Prefer three-position matches over adjacent. They create more positional disruption and generate more new matching opportunities.
Hunt for cascades, not single moves. A chain of 3-5 consecutive matches is worth more than 3-5 isolated moves spread across different turns.
Work right-to-left when moves are independent. Right-side moves preserve left-side match relationships, giving you more control.
Use rank matches as bridges between suit chains. When a suit cascade stalls, a rank match can restart the chain in a different suit.
Restart fast and without guilt. 95% of deals are unsolvable. Spending 10 seconds on a dead deal is better than spending 2 minutes.
Look for clusters. Dense groups of same-suit or same-rank cards within a 4-6 card span are cascade factories. Focus your attention there.
Track the top card identity. When cards stack, the top card determines future matches. Follow the top card through your planned cascade before executing.
Accordion Solitaire has one of the lowest win rates of any solitaire variant, typically estimated at 2-5% even with skilled play. The vast majority of deals are mathematically unsolvable regardless of the moves you make. This is because the single-row layout and strict matching rules (same suit or same rank, only to the immediate left or three positions left) create extremely constrained move options. Skilled players focus on recognizing winnable patterns early and restarting quickly when a deal is clearly lost.
Should I prioritize suit matches or rank matches in Accordion?▾
Neither suit nor rank matches are inherently better — the right choice depends entirely on what each match enables downstream. A suit match that creates a chain reaction of two or three additional moves is far more valuable than a rank match that leads to a dead end. Always look beyond the immediate move and evaluate which match opens up the most future possibilities. That said, rank matches tend to be rarer and can sometimes unlock positions that suit matches cannot.
Is there a difference between adjacent and three-position moves in Accordion?▾
Yes, and the difference is strategically significant. Adjacent moves (one position to the left) compress the row by one card and shift all subsequent cards one position closer. Three-position moves compress the row while also jumping over two intermediate cards, which can dramatically change the matching landscape. Three-position moves are generally more powerful because they create more disruption to the existing card positions, potentially opening up new matches that were not previously available.
How do I know when to restart an Accordion Solitaire deal?▾
Restart when you have scanned the entire row and found zero valid moves, or when the only available moves would clearly make the position worse with no follow-up possibilities. Experienced players also restart when the row has stabilized into a pattern where the remaining cards share neither suit nor rank with their neighbors at positions one or three to the left. Because roughly 95% of deals are unsolvable, fast restarts are not a sign of weakness — they are the most efficient path to finding a winnable deal.
Can I move cards to the right in Accordion Solitaire?▾
No. In Accordion Solitaire, cards can only move to the left — either one position to the left or three positions to the left. The card being moved must match the destination card in either suit or rank. You can never move a card to the right. This left-only movement is what gives the game its name: the row compresses like an accordion folding inward from the right side.