Solitaire is the universal cubicle worker's timewaster. So what do you
get if you add two billion shuffle counts, seventy game types, in-game
statistics, timers, scores, multiple save features and customizable
chimes and graphics? King Sol. Rapture's unbelievable extension of the
original office timewaster is so complete and so thorough, you'll want
to find a way to delete or uninstall the solitaire icon in your games
folder and replace it with King Sol.
With card games, I liken it to the chess genre where every subsequent
release is an evolutionary step. It might be a new graphics engine. It
might be a new artistic motif or the addition of some new technical
novelty. But the additions are always incremental and the final
product, a car with a new shine and a few more features. It seems like
King Sol has taken fifty steps with its hefty amount of material. It
contains a total of seventy solitaire variants that work on the basic
precepts of the card game. Before you start each game, there are
concise instructions to get you started on how each variants scores and
tips on how to play it. You also get a table to show you what your odds
are, how many decks are involved, what basic game type it is and other
details that you can absorb at a glance. King Sol even lets you
organize your favorite game types, play recently chosen variants or a
random one from the list.
Another smart feature introduced by Rapture to cater the game to you is
the ability to keep track of statistics and scores throughout the entire
game itself. You get graphical analysis of your winning ratio in all
sessions and in the current session as well as additional numbered
statistics. You can also set game timers and view extensive lists of
high scores. The game even lets you sort the tables to view them in
meaningful ways. With two billion shuffle counts multiplied by seventy
game variants, that's enough gameplay to outlast the natural lifetime of
your Pocket PC device.
If that's not enough customization, King Sol also lets you customize
backgrounds, deck insignia and sound schemes. That's a lot of ways to
keep the game of solitaire looking fresh. In fact, the Rapture website
lets you download more schemes and guides you through the process of
creating your own should you be unhappy with the ones available.
With handy features like unlimited redo/undo, auto-playing of your
cards, there are lots of amenities in King Sol. Coupled with the fact
that you have manual loading/saving, auto-save and a bookmark mode, you
can leave King Sol any time and come back to your game without any
hassle; something the developers obviously took from Palm based games.
At $19.95 USD, King Sol offers a comprehensive and unbeatable feature
set for the game of solitaire. It's hard to see how the developers will
be able to one-up themselves with the next release of King Sol. Maybe
they'll have to crown it Emperor Sol but they obviously have this market
cornered for the Pocket PC as no other title I've come across offers the
flexibility this one has. The title itself is tiny, weighing in at a
few hundred kilobytes and easily swims its way into the busy mobile
user's handheld.
If you spend any inkling of time with the card game, you're not going to
be disappointed with this buy. And for cubicle workers, if your network
administrator or IS chap has deleted solitaire from all 'work'
computers, now you can play some quality solitaire with King Sol on your
PDA. Time will be wasted discretely and life, all of a sudden, is good
again.
Ratings:
[07/10] Addictiveness
[18/20] Gameplay
[13/15] Graphics
[10/10] Interface/controls
[09/10] Program Size
[03/05] Sound
[05/05] Discreetness
[14/15] Learning Curve
[ N/A ] Multiplayer