Drag pieces onto the grid, clear full rows or columns, and stack multi-line combos for a high score — but if nothing fits, the run ends.
📖How to Play
🎮Gameplay Mechanics
1. Place the Pieces
- Each round gives you three block shapes to work with.
- Drag a shape from the tray and drop it onto the grid.
- Shapes cannot be rotated — plan around the orientation you are given.
- You must place all three shapes before a fresh set appears.
2. Clear Rows and Columns
- Fill every cell in a complete row to wipe that line from the board.
- A single drop can clear one or more lines at once.
3. Combos and Scoring
- Clearing two or more lines in one drop triggers a combo.
- Multi-line clears earn a growing score multiplier — the bigger the stack, the juicier the payout.
- Keep the board open so you have room to set up your next big clear.
4. Game Over
- The run ends when none of your remaining pieces can fit anywhere on the grid.
- Think ahead: one awkward placement can block a shape you need later.
5. Restart Anytime
- Start a fresh board whenever you want to chase a new high score.
- Each session is a clean slate — refine your strategy and beat your best.
💡Tips for Success
1. Scan All Three Shapes First
- Before placing anything, look at every piece in the tray and imagine where each one could go.
2. Leave Room for Big Pieces
- Avoid cluttering the center with awkward gaps that large shapes cannot fill.
3. Hunt for Multi-Line Clears
- Set up rows and columns so one drop can wipe two or more lines and trigger a combo multiplier.
4. Do Not Waste a Corner
- Tuck irregular shapes into corners and edges to keep the middle of the grid flexible.
5. Play the Long Game
- A safe single-line clear is fine early on — save aggressive combo setups for when the board still has space.
Can you chain clears, ride the multiplier, and climb the leaderboard? Drop in, stack your lines, and see how long you can keep the board alive in Block Puzzle!
🧠Design & Strategy
Block Puzzle merges tetromino placement with line clears and combo chains. Holding pieces for multi-line clears beats filling singles opportunistically. Board edges become strategic assets—long pieces need staging zones planned two drops ahead.
It's spatial budgeting under incomplete information about upcoming shapes.