トライピークスソリティア初心者戦略ガイド

トライピークスソリティアで高スコアを目指すための基本戦略。

トライピークスソリティアは直感的で楽しいゲームですが、戦略的にプレイすることでさらに高いスコアと勝率を達成できます。初心者向けの基本戦略を解説します。

連続除去を狙う

トライピークスでは連続してカードを除去(ストリーク)するほどボーナスが増えます。できるだけ長い連続除去を狙って手順を計画しましょう。

3つの山を同時に進める

3つの山を均等に崩していくことで、より多くの利用可能なカードを確保できます。1つの山に集中すると、他の山のカードで詰まりやすくなります。

山札のカードを節約する

山札のカードは貴重なリソースです。できるだけ場のカードを使い、山札は必要な時のみ引くようにしましょう。山札が空になるまでに全ての山を崩せることが理想です。

Which Peak to Clear First

The question of which peak to clear first is the most consequential early-game decision in TriPeaks. The correct answer is not fixed — it depends on the specific deal — but three principles resolve it correctly in the large majority of hands.

Clear the peak with the most accessible cards first. At the start of each hand, count how many face-up cards are visible in each peak zone including the base row cards beneath each peak. The peak with the most face-up cards immediately accessible has the highest chain potential right now. Starting there maximises the length of your opening chain, preserves stock cards for later, and opens face-down cards in that peak zone fastest — which in turn gives you more options as the game develops.

Break ties by choosing the peak whose base-row cards are most chain-connected to the other peaks. If two peaks have equal accessibility, look at the base-row cards beneath each. A base-row card at a mid-rank value (5, 6, 7, 8, 9) is more likely to serve as a cross-peak bridge because mid-rank cards have two adjacent ranks on each side and more potential chain extensions. A base-row card at an extreme rank (Ace, 2, King, Queen) bridges less effectively because one direction of rank-adjacency is either blocked (Kings above) or limited (Aces below). Prefer clearing the peak whose base-row cards are mid-rank when tiebreaking.

Clear completely before moving on. Partially clearing all three peaks simultaneously — removing a card here, a card there — produces short chains and wastes stock draws resetting the chain top across different peak zones. Committing to one peak until its apex card is removed produces longer chains, uncovers face-down cards faster, and leaves the other peaks as fresh chain-extension territory when you transition. The only exception: if a base-row bridge card becomes available mid-peak that connects to an urgent face-up card in another peak zone, cross the bridge and return to your target peak afterward.

10 Ways to Win More TriPeaks Games Instantly

1. Always Look Two Cards Ahead Before Playing

Before playing any accessible card, identify what the chain top will be after you play it and how many follow-up cards are accessible from that new top. The extra two seconds this takes pays back in chains that run six, eight, ten cards deep instead of stalling at three. This single habit produces more improvement faster than any other adjustment in TriPeaks strategy.

2. Clear One Peak Completely Before Spreading Across All Three

Focused peak clearing produces longer chains, faster face-down card reveals, and better use of each stock draw than spreading effort evenly. Choose your first peak using the accessibility count and mid-rank base-row criteria above, commit to it, and transition only when it is cleared or when a bridge card pulls you productively into another zone.

3. Prioritise Mid-Rank Cards as Chain Starters After a Stock Draw

After a stock draw resets the chain, the value of the new chain top determines how many follow-up accessible cards are immediately available. Mid-rank cards (5–9) have rank-adjacent options on both sides — a 7 can be followed by a 6 or an 8, opening two directions of extension. After a stock draw that lands on an extreme rank (Ace, 2, King, Queen), draw again quickly if no adjacent card is accessible — these extreme-rank chain tops have limited extension options and a second draw may produce a more productive starting point.

4. Use the Stock to Unstick, Not to Replace Thinking

The most common misuse of the stock in TriPeaks is drawing when an accessible card was available but not spotted. Before every stock draw, run a two-pass scan of all accessible tableau cards — first checking for cards one rank above the chain top, then one rank below. Only after both passes find nothing should the stock be drawn. This scan takes three seconds and recovers one to two chain extensions per game that a hasty draw would have cut off.

5. Treat Base-Row Cards as Bridge Resources, Not Just Obstacles

The ten base-row cards connect all three peak zones and are the primary mechanism for cross-peak chain transitions. Before playing a base-row card, check whether it is the only available bridge between the current peak zone and an adjacent one. If yes, consider whether the bridge is better used now or held until the current peak clears and a fresh chain transition is needed.

6. Do Not Break a Running Chain to Play a Tidying Move

A tidying move is one that removes a card you could remove but that does not extend the current chain — it requires a stock draw to reset the chain top and then continue. Tidying moves during a running chain are almost always a mistake: they sacrifice chain momentum for a minor positional improvement that could have been made equally well after the chain naturally stalls. Let chains run until they stall naturally; only then reposition.

7. Track Which Ranks Are Buried in Face-Down Cards

As face-down cards are revealed, register their ranks. If three cards of rank 7 have already been removed from the tableau and the fourth is somewhere still face-down, any accessible 6 or 8 is slightly less valuable as a chain-top holder because fewer 7s remain to extend from it. This lightweight tracking habit prevents overcommitting to chain paths whose extension cards are mostly gone.

8. Save at Least Five Stock Cards for the Final Peak

The final peak — the last group of cards before the tableau is cleared — often presents the hardest chain-extension problem because the tableau is sparse and fewer cards are rank-adjacent. Having at least five stock cards remaining when you begin the final peak guarantees enough chain-reset attempts to find productive new tops even if the initial chain stalls. If you are down to three or fewer stock cards with one full peak remaining, the hand is likely heading toward a partial clear regardless of play quality.

9. When Two Accessible Cards Are Both Chain-Adjacent, Play the One From a Deeper Column

A deeper column card — one that has more covered cards above it in the peak — is more valuable to remove than a shallower card of equal rank-adjacency, because removing it uncovers a face-down card and expands future accessibility. When two cards extend the chain equally well, always prefer the one that simultaneously uncovers a new card. This habit consistently produces better mid-game positions than random same-value selection.

10. In a Stuck Position, Identify the Blocking Card Rather Than Drawing Repeatedly

When the chain stalls repeatedly and stock draws fail to restart it, the cause is almost always a specific blocking card — a face-down card covering two others that are needed, or a key rank that all remaining accessible cards depend on but that is buried under unremovable cards. Identifying the specific blockage and planning the minimum sequence of stock draws and plays needed to resolve it is more productive than drawing repeatedly and hoping. If the blockage is unresolvable — the needed rank is buried under cards that cannot be cleared with remaining stock — recognise this and start a fresh hand rather than exhausting the remaining stock on a hand that cannot be won.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

The most common TriPeaks mistake is playing the first rank-adjacent card visible without considering which play leads into the longest subsequent chain. TriPeaks always offers multiple chain-extension options simultaneously, and the first visible one is rarely the most productive. The two-seconds-of-lookahead habit — checking where each available play leads before committing — is the single biggest differentiator between players who win 70% of games and players who win 85%.

The second most common mistake is treating all three peaks as equal priority simultaneously. Spreading clearing effort evenly produces constant chain resets as the active zone shifts between sparse peak areas, consuming stock cards on chain resets that focused peak clearing would not have needed. Commit to one peak, clear it, then transition.

FAQ

トライピークスの勝率はどのくらいですか?

75〜85%程度です。戦略的にプレイすることでさらに向上できます。

ストリークが途切れた場合はどうすれば良いですか?

冷静に次の手を考え、また連続除去のチャンスを狙いましょう。

最高スコアを出すコツは?

長いストリークを作ることが最高スコアへの近道です。山札を効率的に使うことも重要です。