Rolling brick puzzle game
Challenge other players online in this epic penalty shootout! Outlast your opponents in the ultimate copter arena. Grab upgrades and superpowers, avoid the toxic fog, and be the last one flying! Test your aim in online multiplayer!
Race your opponent to get to zero first. You'll have to calculate your own score. Play the classic game, or mix it up with an all-new action mode: fireballs, blasters, gravity wells, and more! Your pineapple is trapped at the top of a huge tower! Jump over pits of lava and dodge dangerous traps to rescue it. Grow your civilization during the Bronze Age. Collect food, research technology, defend yourself from other civilizations, and build a world wonder! Let's get rolling!
It may not look like much at first, but we have a feeling you'll be earning trillions of points in no time. We no longer support Internet Explorer. Although you can still browse the site, most of our games won't work. In our top online collection of the best free brick games, here at Silvergames.
Throw a ball back and forth between your paddle and the brick wall until the latter is completely gone. Bricks are often used for buildings, but to you they are obstacles to be removed. Match colors to become the breaker of bricks, if not chains. Don't forget to rate us! Hey, Nicodemes! We're so thrilled you love the game. Thank you for making our day today! Keep playing and please share the app with your friends to help us spread the love for the game!
The concept of the game is designed like a Vegas Slot machine. Keep loosing and you come back. If you win every time you lose interest. That is actually good for the gamer. But you spend more time looking at the same advertisement over and over. That gets old very quickly. Either get more sponsors or shorten the advertisements. I think it could be a good game for young people.
But the the selling other games eliminates play on DokoBlocku. That spreads the attention span. Hi Thanks for your comment! Richard Tucker designed a diagram of only 8x8 squares that is almost bare. It has only three barriers.
The maze uses a block of six dice taped together to form a 3x2x1 block. Place the block so it is standing on one of its long edges, and it lies across the three squares marked Start. The object is to roll the block until it stands on a long edge and lies across the three squares marked Goal.
No part of the block can land on any of the squares with the brick pattern. Solving this maze is an interesting experience. After you leave Start you travel for a long distance without having to do much thinking. The only false paths you encounter are very short. Something similar happens if you solve the maze backwards from Goal. Here you go for 20 moves before you encounter any complexity.
Richard Tucker tells me that the shortest solution is 59 moves. But you should be happy if you can find any solution. I think this 3x2x1 block may actually make things too complex. It makes it difficult to see what is going on in the maze.
Well, someone did. He has a few rolling-block mazes, some of which use blocks of monstrous proportions: 3x3x2, 4x3x2, and 10x1x1. But eventually it dried okay. If you do build the block, click here to get to the layout and then print it. No part of the U can lie on any square with the brick pattern.
However, the U can straddle one of these squares, as it does at the start. And if the block is upright, creating an arch, then the middle die of the arch can be over a square with the brick pattern. The shortest solution takes 49 moves. Her layouts have squares of different colors, but no square is a barrier. Instead, she has this rule: The block must always lie on squares of one color. It uses the small two-dice block 2x1x1. The block starts upright on the square marked A and must be rolled across the board until it stands upright on the square marked B.
In this particular maze, the block can move onto a red square, but only if it stands upright on the red square. Click here for a diagram of the maze that you can print. To make printing easier, I changed the blue squares to white and the red squares to gray.
Andrea also created a Java program to implement this and other Color Zone mazes. This one uses a larger block. The picture below is a three-dimensional representation of the maze.
Click here for a two-dimensional diagram , which you can print. You can roll the block on the two-dimensional diagram as you solve the maze.
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