Pretty Good Solitaire Reviews – Page 4

5/5 rating based on 36 reviews. Read all reviews for Pretty Good Solitaire for iPhone.
Pretty Good Solitaire is paid iOS app published by Goodsol Development Inc.

Still the best

spacial relationship gal

I have been playing pretty good solitaire for almost 20 years. Been playing the mac version for about 7yrs (windows prior to that). Was thrilled to find that there's an iPad version. Still waiting for Cromwell to appear on the mac version, but I know it'll happen by n by.


Absolutely the best

Jkdaisy

I have also been playing this game for 20 years or more. Not only doesn't sound hundreds of games, it's user interface is wonderful, and thee customer support is terrific. Two things I miss from the PC version: The game beautiful Russian which is hard to find, and the ability to search for games by difficulty. Inform with this many days it would be wonderful to have a multiple search, for example hard games with three decks. However I'm just really grateful that this game exists!


YaY!

Chuckcfix

I have waited a good while for PGS to hit the iPad. I've played the PC version for a good many years and no other version of solitaire comes close to the quality and number of games! BRAVO!


I CANT SAY ENOUGH!!!!!!

BJP44

I have played solitaire on my computer for years but nothing has ever come close in comparison for my iPad......until I found this one! There are about a million games and the features and options that make a game easy to play are all here and with easy to understand rules. I'm not sure I'll ever get to all the games. This is one great app!!!!


Great

Bpurr

I have used this for many, many years. It is the best.


Purchased it because I loved the PC version ...

Airforceteacher

But the iPad version is buggy - it keeps losing my score history - it shows all of my scores as zero. Also, I don’t like not knowing how many more deals are available in a game - on the PC it was clear from the picture or a label how many more deals, but the only way in this game is to deal and hold your finger on the deck.