IntroductionBlock Blast looks simple: place shapes, clear lines, repeat. But the game is sneaky—every placement is a promise you make to your future self. Place poorly, and you’re signing up for a grid full of awkward corners that won’t accept anything. Place wisely, and the board stays breathable, you clear more lines, and the score climbs naturally. This guide is built for beginners who want a practical strategy: fewer panics, more control. Main ContentWhat You’re Really PlayingBlock Blast is not only about clearing lines—it’s about keeping the grid placeable. Because pieces don’t drop, the board doesn’t “fix itself.” You are the physics. Quick Rules Refresher- Place blocks anywhere they fit
- Full rows/columns clear for points
- The game ends when the three offered pieces can’t be placed
Your Best Habit: Pause and ScanBefore every move, look at all available pieces and ask two questions: - Which placement preserves the largest open space?
- Which placement avoids creating a tiny pocket?
A high-score player isn’t faster—they’re calmer. They treat every move like it affects the next two turns. The Board Shapes You Want- Big rectangles: These accept the widest variety of pieces.
- Smooth edges: Jagged outlines create dead zones.
- Balanced height: Keep the board relatively even; avoid one tall “mountain.”
The Board Shapes You Must Avoid- Isolated single holes: Many pieces can’t fill them cleanly.
- Long narrow tunnels: They look usable but often trap awkward gaps.
- Edge walls: Overbuilding along the border can create permanent limitations.
Scoring That Doesn’t Kill YouScoring high is about setting traps for the board—in a good way. - Go for double clears whenever possible
- Use small pieces to finish lines rather than wasting big pieces
- Keep your clears balanced so you don’t end up with a board that only clears in one direction
The Big Piece RuleAlways keep at least one “parking space” for a large shape (like the long bar or big square). If you can’t see a place for a big piece right now, that becomes your primary objective. A delayed clear is fine—an unplaceable big piece ends the run. ConclusionBlock Blast rewards players who manage space, not just players who chase points. Scan all pieces, prioritize open rectangles, avoid isolated holes, and plan clears that create more flexibility than they consume. When you protect space for big pieces, you stop losing to “impossible” turns—and start building reliable high scores.
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