42 All Time Classics

Actionloop

Brain Training

Big Brain Academy

Cooking Guide

Electroplankton

Maths Training

More Brain Training

Nintendogs

Picross DS

Sudoku Master

Sight Training

Tetris DS

Animal Crossing

Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney

Elite Beat Agents

Harvest Moon DS

Hotel Dusk: Room 215

Magic Made Fun

Nintendo DS Browser

Nintendo MP3 Player

Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney

Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney: Justice for All

Professor Layton and the Curious Village

Puzzle League DS

Trauma Center: Under the Knife

 

Big Brain Academy for Wii

Endless Ocean

Wii Chess

Wii Fit

Wii Music

Wii Sports

Animal Crossing: Let's go to the City

Trauma Center: New Blood

Trauma Center: Second Opinion

Wii Play

 

THE RULES

OF TETRIS

Beneath the seemingly innocent exterior of Tetris lurks a game of complex mathematical laws. Here is a quick guide to the ‘Rules of Tetris’.
 
Each Tetris piece is called a tetrimino (from the Greek ‘tetra’, meaning ‘four’) and is made up of a different configuration of four smaller squares. There are seven tetriminos in total.

Each piece that falls down the screen is randomly chosen from one of these seven types. The player must rotate the falling pieces and slot them together to create a solid horizontal line, which is then cleared from the screen. Fail to clear lines and the pieces start to stack up. If they fill the screen, it’s ‘Game Over’.

Clearing one line at a time is worth the least points, with two or three lines scoring higher. The ultimate aim, though, is to clear four lines at once (called a ‘Tetris’) for the highest possible score.

However, you can only create a ‘Tetris’ by using the long ‘I’-shaped piece, by arranging pieces in such a way that a vertical gap is left. Skilled players plan ahead by keeping an eye on the ‘Next’ window, which shows the pieces that are coming next.

Bonus points are awarded if you speed up the descent of a piece by pushing down on the +Control Pad. This is easy at first, when the game runs slowly, but at higher skill levels the pieces fall much faster and are hence harder to manoeuvre into the right position.

Such is the unique mathematical nature of Tetris that some thinkers have pondered whether, theoretically, it can be played forever. However, the fact that the blocks appear randomly means that the player is bound to lose eventually, no matter how fast their fingers are!
 

Release Date

21.04.2006

Software Benefit

> Exercise

> Focus

> Socialise