Love Match
A romantic assembly solitaire. Hold someone in your heart, deal a board of diagonal tiles, and rotate them so the triangular fr. Embeddable domain-locked widget, mobile-responsive.

This is a card game that doubles as a love fortune - an old practice of using playing cards or tarot in patience-style layouts to read romantic fate. You play the solitaire; the pattern that emerges (what clears, what stays stuck, what pairs successfully) mirrors something about the question you're holding. It's more meditative than a standard card draw because you spend a few minutes with it rather than getting an instant answer.
How it works
Start the solitaire game with your romantic question in mind. The deck shuffles, the layout deals. Play the game as you normally would - matching pairs, clearing cards, working toward a completed board. At the end, the outcome of the game (fully cleared, partially cleared, stuck in specific positions) is read against your question, with a short interpretive reading based on how the game resolved.
Understanding your result
A fully cleared board is traditionally read as a clear path ahead - what you're hoping for is accessible. Cards remaining in the final layout are read by their suit and position: hearts remaining suggest emotion that hasn't been resolved or expressed; clubs suggest practical obstacles; spades suggest conflict or things being held back; diamonds suggest material or circumstantial factors. Pairs that formed early in the game are noted differently from pairs that came together at the end.
Frequently asked questions
Can I keep playing if I get stuck?
In traditional fortune solitaire, where you stop is part of the reading. Getting stuck isn't failure - it's information about where the energy is blocked.
Does the game outcome actually mean something?
It's a reflective tool - the reading is generated from the game outcome, but whether that outcome is meaningful is yours to decide. Many people find the game gives them a focus for questions they've been circling.
What kind of love questions work best?
Specific and honest ones - not 'will I find love' but 'what's between me and the connection I want right now?' The more real the question, the more the reading lands.
Is this for entertainment?
Yes, and for reflection. We don't make relationship predictions or guarantees.
