Microsoft created the Entertainment Packs to encourage non-business use of Windows. According to company
telemetry FreeCell was the seventh most-used Windows program, ahead of
Word and
Microsoft Excel. The original Microsoft FreeCell package supports 32,000 numbered deals, generated by a 15-
bit,
pseudorandom-number seed. These deals are known as the "Microsoft 32,000", Later versions of
FreeCell include more than one million deals. Out of the current Microsoft Windows games, eight are unsolvable. Speedrun.com records the fastest time to solve a game is 7 seconds. The significance of the "Microsoft 32,000" to many FreeCell players is such that other computer implementations of FreeCell will often go out of their way to guarantee compatibility with these deals, rather than simply using the most readily available
random number generator for their target platforms. As an
easter egg, Microsoft intentionally includes a few impossible games, with negative numbers. Playing these games do not count towards the statistics recorded by the computer. ==See also==