Card (44 programs)
Pros: Brings UNO to life. Visually striking animations. UNO Road system reward.
Cons: Customization is progression-locked.
Pros: Engaging memory challenge. Multiplayer fun. Free-to-play.
Cons: Repetitive gameplay.
Pros: Easy to learn the ropes. Sizable roster of collectible cards. Procedurally generated levels. Ability to enhance difficulty level.
Cons: Freezes unexpectedly at times.
Pros: Unique gameplay concept. Diverse factions. Additional game modes.
Cons: Steep learning curve.
Pros: Comes with guides for beginners. Has lots of avatar personalization options. Lets players meet Pokémon in a different playing style.
Cons: Player needs a Pokémon Trading Card Game Online account first. The learning curve can be steep for beginners.
Pros: Interesting card system. Branching paths to take. Unpredictable scenarios. Various characters to meet.
Cons: Short gameplay.
Pros: Visualized in pixel art style. Minimalistic Japanese-inspired setting. Turn-based strategy gameplay.
Cons: Unbalanced weapons. Lack of customizable starting load-outs.
Pros: Has a wide range of card effects. Complex gameplay potential.
Cons: Bugs include a never ending game.
Pros: Easy-to-learn mechanics. Combines card and exploration gameplay. Unique hand-drawn map.
Cons: The difficulty level is quite high. Cards that players used can never be collected again. Some cards are not that useful.
Pros: Unique dice-building gameplay. Turn-based rogue-lite mechanics. Cute 2D pixel art.
Cons: No tutorial. Font can be hard to read.
Pros: Offers over 175 different cards already existing from physical packs. Highly customizable. Has an in-game tutorial. Has both online multiplayer and single-player modes.
Cons: Doesn’t load properly often.
Pros: New Solitaire gameplay. Endless high-paced chiptunes. Includes real-speech synthesis robot. Vibrant retro-style graphics.
Cons: Similar gameplay to other modern card games.
Pros: Smooth gameplay. Developer support. Atmospheric. Addictive.
Cons: Only ten free levels. Text difficult to read. Cards too small. Hard to progress without purchases.
Pros: Less-common card game. Solid interface. Easy to pick up. Some hints and tips.
Cons: Score not visible. Must bid to pass. Simplistic graphics. Simplistic sound.
Pros: Nicely designed graphics. Adjustable difficulty level. Useful for casual play and practice. Well-designed gameplay.
Cons: No online functionality. No clear beginner's rulebook. Irritating in-app purchases. Poor customer service from developers.
Pros: Easy to pick up. Lots of different decks. Great for casual play. Wide variety of levels.
Cons: Infrequent updates. Low-contrast graphics. Crowded interface. Minimal competitive options.
Pros: Easy to pick up and play. Runs smoothly. Fair AI and card draws. High graphical quality.
Cons: Only 3 versions of Pyramid. Cursor display issues. Samey graphics colors. Few options.
Pros: Numerous different languages are supported. Most settings cane be optimized. A basic and no-frills version of solitaire. Klondike solitaire is offered.
Cons: 32-bit systems are not supported. 71.2 megabytes of memory will be required. A handful of frustrating bugs are present during gameplay. The graphics leave much to be desired.
Pros: Offers both single and multi-player modes. Visuals and playing area are customizable. Online play is compatible with other devices. Includes American, Omnibus and Black Maria.
Cons: No option to undo card passing selections. Occasional issues with online connections. Intelligent AI might make it too difficult. Lacks teaching features for new Hearts players.