• Publisher: Subsoap
  • Release Date: Mar 30, 2009
Faerie Solitaire Image
Metascore
  1. First Review
  2. Second Review
  3. Third Review
  4. Fourth Review

No score yet - based on 0 Critics Awaiting 4 more reviews What's this?

User Score

Mixed or average reviews- based on 19 Ratings

  • Summary: Have magical fun in the addicting Card game, Faerie Solitaire! Find and raise a Faerie pet and repopulate the magical land of Avalon using the resources found by clearing each level.

    Earn enough gold to purchase unique powerups and specialized upgrades, making each stage a breeze. Chain t
    ogether combos to fill up your energy meter and save the Faeries!

    With 8 worlds, 40 levels, over 400 hands to play through, loads of upgrades to buy, and one exciting adventure, Faerie Solitaire will have you hooked for months, giving you the very best value over any other game available today.
    Expand
Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 0 out of
  2. Mixed: 0 out of
  3. Negative: 0 out of
Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 6 out of 9
  2. Negative: 1 out of 9
  1. Takes a solid solitaire game and adds a story mode, power-ups, virtual pets, all skippable if you want. Has decent music and great ambient sounds. Great graphics. Very snappy game play, you can really make the cards fly. Solid. Expand
  2. 8
    Taking on the already perfect and addictive Solitaire and making it better is a tough job, but Faerie Solitaire manages to maintain the feeling and addictiveness of the original game while adding new, interesting features, further improving the game. Expand
  3. 5
    It's solitaire all right--and a lot of it. There's plenty of game to be played and it actually has a story and an XP system with some other subtle twists to an otherwise boring card game. It certainly works at passing the time by. Expand
  4. An interesting take on solitaire but ultimately too repetitive to remain interesting. The interface could have been made slightly more fluent.

    My biggest gripe with Faerie Solitaire is that the difficulty levels are too disparate; where the lowest difficulty "normal" is far too easy, the two higher difficulty levels (Master and Impossible) become impossible later on, forcing you to switch back to a difficulty level that just doesn't offer a challenge. You have to wonder why they even set goals on the lowest difficulty level, there is no way you could possibly fail.

    Unless you're a big fan of solitaire and casual games, this is not for you.
    Expand

See all 9 User Reviews