

This includes (but is not limited to) submissions related to: No politics, soapboxing, or agenda based submissions. Any sources (blog, article, press release, video, etc.) with a publication date more recent than two months are not allowed. No personal opinions, anecdotes or subjective statements (e.g "TIL xyz is a great movie").

Videos are fine so long as they come from reputable sources (e.g. Images alone do not count as valid references. Please link directly to a reliable source that supports every claim in your post title. Submit interesting and specific facts that you just found out (not broad information you looked up, TodayILearned is not /r/wikipedia). Extract the contents of the downloaded zip folder and then run the extracted executable to install the games – the package consists of: Solitaire, Spider Solitaire, Minesweeper, FreeCell, Hearts, Chess Titans, Mahjong Titans, Purble Place, Internet Spades, Internet Checkers, Internet Backgammon.You learn something new every day what did you learn today? The free games package is available from Sergey’s Winaero site and consists of a 147MB zip download. *The Windows 10 Anniversary Update is currently limited to insider preview users only, however, it will eventually be installed on all Windows 10 systems (possibly July). Sergey’s Windows 7 game package has been around for a little while now, however, the software has recently been updated to support the upcoming Windows 10 Anniversary Update. Software developer Sergey Tkachenko recognized the need and designed a package which brings all the classic Windows 7 games back into Windows 10 and Windows 8/8.1. While alternatives are now available as Modern Apps or Universal Apps, many users still prefer the classic versions.

gained a pretty large following during the Windows 7 years and have been sorely missed in the newer operating systems. The original FreeCell, Minesweeper, Hearts, Solitaire, etc. Install & Play Classic Windows 7 Games on Windows 10/8.1/8įans of the classic Windows 7 games were pretty miffed when Microsoft chose to consign the games to oblivion with the release of Windows 8.
