Vegas and Solitaire don’t usually go together in the same sentence, but G.Games has decided to change that up with Vegas Solitaire. It’s a clean, no-fuss rendition of the classic patience card game, only this time with a couple of casino touches — including side bets and the hint of luck alongside logic.
The layout sticks to what you'd expect from any standard solitaire setup — seven tableau columns, four empty foundation piles, and a single draw pile on the top left. A 52-card deck is used. You can expect the minimum stake to start at 0.10, with no paylines in sight since this is a table game and not a slot. The aim remains simple: move cards in descending alternating colour order from the tableau into the foundation stacks, sorted by suit from Ace to King. Every move counts.
G.Games has been on the scene for a while now, best known for crafting intuitive, sleek titles with minimal bloat and a few clever mechanics tucked in. Alongside Vegas Solitaire, they’ve released titles like Eastern Gold, Dead Man’s Fingers, and other sharp-looking games that lean more toward the traditional but still manage to throw something unexpected into the mix.
Here’s how you can get started and play Vegas Solitaire for yourself:
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There aren’t any symbols in the slot sense — but that doesn’t mean there’s no payout structure. Here, winning is all about how you manage the cards and whether the unique bet conditions are met. There are no wilds, no scatters, and certainly no reels. Instead, wins come in the form of side bets. Here's a quick look at the bonus payout structure:
Condition | Payout |
No Move (no legal play at the start) | 15x your bet |
Red & Black (all red or black at deal, including stockpile) | 200x your bet |
Cards themselves don’t have individual values — they’re simply the tools for completing the game. The final card in each of the seven tableau columns starts face up, while the others are face down and can be revealed as you progress. It’s a pure solitaire format, so success depends more on strategy and luck of the draw than hitting a payline.
There’s no wild card or scatter mechanic here. Instead, Vegas Solitaire’s special “symbols” are the layout elements themselves — columns, foundations, and the play deck. The “No Move” and “Red & Black” side bets function as pseudo bonus triggers, rewarding unlikely but possible board conditions with hefty multipliers.
This one’s fairly self-explanatory. If you place a side bet on “No Move” and the starting hand gives you absolutely nothing to work with — no legal card placements on the tableau — then you’re looking at a potential 15x return. It’s not common, but it’s just plausible enough to warrant a cheeky side bet.
This side bet is for the truly daring. If all the revealed cards — including the top card of the stockpile — are potentially the same colour (all red or all black), the game rewards you with 200x your stake. Again, not something you'll see often, but certainly satisfying when it happens. It's the Vegas glitz moment in an otherwise strategy-first table game.
Beyond the side bets, everything is exactly as a solitaire purist might expect: cards must alternate colours and descend in value when moved across the tableau. Foundations must be built up by suit from Ace to King. The standard rules apply, and the game ends when all cards are moved to the foundation piles — or when no further moves are possible. The bonus here is that no autoplay, no flashing animations — just card logic, clean design, and a bit of betting flair.
Vegas Solitaire is a clean, card-focused alternative to spinning reels — and it lands somewhere between casual strategy and casino chance. If that’s your kind of pace, you might also like G.Games’ Eastern Gold or look into other table classics like Jacks Or Better Double Up. All these titles can be found at Heart Bingo.