Card games are having a huge moment. Marvel Snap is so big that everyone who plays it hates it. Pokemon TCG Pocket is introducing thousands of people to the card game, and raking in millions of dollars. Balatro, one of the best games I’ve ever played, hooked people and won GOTY awards with its crazy synergies and repeatable runs.
No one understands how playing cards work
Some of humanity’s oldest toys are our most complex
![Simone de Rochefort](https://platform.polygon.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/08/Simone-de-Rochefort-Green-Purple.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&crop=0%2C0%2C100%2C100&w=96)
And last year, I got addicted to Solitaire.
Why me.
During the dark final days of 2024, I was averaging 12 wins per day in Sawayama Solitaire, one of the Solitaires created by developer Zachtronics. Sawayama Solitaire is a variant of Klondike — the one that’s been bundled into every version of Windows since 1990.
Some games of Sawayama Solitaire felt impossible. Some were absurdly easy. Most of them were a satisfying detangling of cards that had me immediately pressing that “new game” button once I got the win.
How was the most basic card game on Earth owning my life like this?
I think it’s because we don’t understand playing cards.
In 1969, as protests raged against the Vietnam War and counterculture made waves across the nation, a magician named Persi Diaconis went to college.
Diaconis had been a professional magician since age 14, and was skilled in sleight-of-hand tricks. But it was probability that fascinated him.
He went on to take a degree in statistics. He became a world-renowned mathematician. In 1992, he proved that it takes seven riffle shuffles to truly randomize a 52-card deck, alongside fellow mathematician Dave Bayer. His research on card shuffling has implications for scientific fields as far-flung as the study of glass melting and the creation of magnets.
He doesn’t know how Solitaire works.