Official Explanation
Read the Original Sentence Carefully, Looking for Errors:
The opening phrase of this sentence must modify the noun that directly follows it. The comparative "than four-handed canasta" makes it clear that three-handed canasta, not the strategy, must follow the comma.
Scan and Group the Answer Choices:
(A) and (C) begin with "the more challenging strategy," (B) and (E) begin with "three-handed canasta," and (D) begins with "three-handed canasta's more challenging strategy." Use this 2-2-1 split to begin eliminating choices.
Eliminate Wrong Answer Choices:
Eliminate (A), (C), and (D). They all compare "four-handed canasta" to "strategy." (D) might have been a contender, but its use of the possessive "three-handed canasta's" effectively makes canasta into an adjective, not a noun, and four-handed canasta is being compared to a "more challenging strategy."
(B) and (E) both begin with the correct "three-handed canasta." However, (E) doesn't fit correctly into the original sentence. "... than with" at the end of (E) sets up an incorrect comparison between the "card players" and the "other versions of the game."
(B) is the only remaining choice, and it is correct.
TAKEAWAY: Make sure comparisons are logical: you can compare apples to oranges, or apple trees to orange trees, but not apples to orange trees.