Parents' Guide to

Fantasy Solitaire: Card Match

Opening screen.

Common Sense Media Review

Erin Brereton By Erin Brereton , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 9+

Clever structure gives kids room to explore card strategies.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 9+?

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What's It About?

Kids use cards to battle storybook villains in FANTASY SOLITAIRE: CARD MATCH. They can submit a run of consecutively numbered cards from the same suit, such as the 3,4, and 5 of clubs, or a set with the same number. Fairy tale characters imbue each card with a point value. Your move's total points are subtracted from the villain's in each turn. They'll attack if they're allowed to get closer, affecting your stamina. Kids can swap and draw more cards if needed. They'll earn coins for wins, which can be used on things like dealing new cards.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say: Not yet rated
Kids say: Not yet rated

The game challenges kids to pick the most effective card combination -- which, while not impossibly difficult, requires enough thought for playing to consistently be compelling. Combining math, logic, and other critical thinking elements, Fantasy Solitaire: Card Match features well-known fairy tale characters such as Cinderella and Robin Hood, who kids unlock as they play. A witch broke the characters' stories into fragments, and to repair them, they're searching for individual storybook pages, which kids earn. Strategy factors into the cards selected because kids aim for the best possible point combination to take down their opponent. Characters correspond to a card suit and will provide different points for cards. Kids get 7 points for each diamond suit one they play, for example, when Beauty of Beauty and the Beast fame is in their roster. Pulling the cards from your deck toward the villain serves as an attack, and the visual effect is about as dynamic as you'll find for a card game.

Some aspects of the format work better than others. The task list, for example, would be a great way to prioritize what to do, but the descriptions -- things like "I made a wish" -- are so vague it ends up ultimately not being very helpful. Kids will also see some pushes to buy special packages and other items, including some ads for other games with a sneaky presentation that makes clicking on them by accident easy. The game involves a time component, so kids could potentially get locked out after playing for awhile. Generally, though, it doesn't seem to have been designed to trap people in a corner or leave them confused about how to continue. Kids can have the deck deal new cards if none of the current selections are helpful, and if their hand is out of playing options, they can swap one of their cards for a new one. Moves like that offer them a chance to work around temporary roadblocks -- making Fantasy Solitaire: Card Match both fun to play and a potential learning experience.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about how strategy is used in Fantasy Solitaire: Card Match. How can kids make an educated guess about which moves would be best?

  • Can your child identify any other card combinations that could be made to defeat the villain and complete a round?

  • How should you handle a situation if you have no idea what to do next? How can you determine a way to advance in a game or other scenario?

App Details

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