Launched this week

Klassik Solitaire
Classic Klondike without ads, tracking, or subscriptions
10 followers
Classic Klondike without ads, tracking, or subscriptions
10 followers
Klassik Solitaire is a clean Klondike game for iPhone, iPad and Android. Play one game free every day, or unlock unlimited play once. Draw 1 or 3, left- and right-handed layouts, three card sizes, offline play. No ads or tracking.




How does the one-game-a-day limit work exactly, do I get to pick when to start or is it on a fixed reset timer? Also curious if the unlock is a one-time purchase or subscription.
@edasayakaldf Good questions, Eda!
The daily game works on calendar days, not a rolling timer: you get one free game per day, and the day resets at midnight in your device's local time zone. You choose when to play it — the game is counted when you start a new deal, so nothing runs out if you open the app in the morning and play in the evening. (Note that opening the app deals a fresh game, so that deal becomes your game for the day.) There is no time limit on the game itself; you can take as long as you like to finish it.
And the unlock is a single one-time purchase — no subscription, no recurring charges. It simply removes the daily limit permanently, including future updates.
Love how clean this looks and the no-ads no-tracking setup is exactly what I want from a solitaire app. One thing I'd love to see is a simple undo button for accidental double-taps on the stock pile, especially when playing draw 3 mode where misclicks are extra punishing.
@mirag1jy Thank you, Mira! That is exactly the experience we wanted to build.
Undo is something we went back and forth on, and in the end we left it out on purpose. For us part of the charm of solitaire is that every move counts — an undo button quietly turns the game into a different, more forgiving game, and we wanted Klassik to stay honest to the classic.
That said, you are describing something a bit different: not wanting to rewind a bad decision, but a misclick you never intended. That is a fair distinction, and if we ever address it, it would more likely be by preventing accidental double-taps on the stock pile than by adding undo.
Thanks for the thoughtful feedback, this is exactly the kind we hoped for.
The decision to lock offline play and zero tracking behind a single purchase feels like real respect for the player. Nice work on the left- and right-handed layouts too, that kind of detail usually gets skipped.
@medineasl16675 Thank you, Medine! One small clarification, because it makes us look even better than your kind words already do: offline play and zero tracking are not behind the purchase. Every player gets them from the first free game — the one-time purchase only unlocks unlimited play. We did not want privacy to be a premium feature.
And thank you for noticing the handedness layouts. It is a small thing to build but a real comfort in one-handed play, and comments like yours are why details like that are worth doing.
finally a solitaire app that doesn't shove ads at you between every hand, and the right-handed layout is a small detail but i genuinely appreciate it
@enginkasaphdgg Thank you! The no-ads part was the whole reason we built Klassik Solitaire — we wanted a game we would actually enjoy playing ourselves, without interruptions between hands.
Glad the handedness option found its audience too. It is one of those details that costs little to build but makes one-handed play noticeably more comfortable, since the stock pile sits under your thumb instead of across the screen. If there are other small quality-of-life details you would like to see, we are all ears.
finally a solitaire app that just lets me play without an ad popping up every five seconds, and the right-handed layout is a nice touch i didnt know i needed.
@suatxogw Thank you, Suat! That ad-free feeling is the whole product, honestly — we built Klassik Solitaire because we kept closing solitaire apps that interrupted the game more than they let us play it.
Funny you mention the handedness layout as something you did not know you needed — that has been the most-mentioned small feature since launch. Once the stock pile sits under the right thumb, there is no going back.
Enjoy the games, and if anything ever feels off, we would genuinely like to hear about it.