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Minesweeper Rules

Objective and basic concepts

The objective in Minesweeper is to find and mark all the mines hidden under the grey squares, in the shortest time possible. This is done by clicking on the squares to open them. Each square will have one of the following:

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  1. A mine, and if you click on it you'll lose the game.
  2. A number, which tells you how many of its adjacent squares have mines in them.
  3. Nothing. In this case you know that none of the adjacent squares have mines, and they will be automatically opened as well.

Octagon is a minimal arcade game where you have to move fast or be left behind. As the floor moves beneath you, spin your world around to dodge speed bumps. Flip upside-down to avoid holes, surf on top of the Octagon—whatever you can do to survive the mad race through this trippy 8-sided tunnel. Play Octagon, a free online game on Kongregate. Kongregate free online game Octagon - “Octagon is like Temple Run but on steroids and with much cooler music and graphics.

It is guaranteed that the first square you open won't contain a mine, so you can start by clicking any square. Often you'll hit on an empty square on the first try and then you'll open up a few adjacent squares as well, which makes it easier to continue. Then it's basically just looking at the numbers shown, and figuring out where the mines are.

Gameplay

There are essentially five actions you can take in Minesweeper:

  1. Open a square. This is done simply by left clicking on a square.
  2. Marking a square as a mine. This is done by right clicking on a square. A little mine icon will show up there.
  3. Marking a square with a question mark. This is done by right clicking twice on a square, or right clicking once on a square that's already marked as a mine. Question marks are useful to mark squares you're not absolutely sure are mines, but want to make sure you don't accidentally open them.
  4. Clear any marks. Again, right click on the square. Right clicking cycles through the following states: Bomb, Question Mark, Clear.
  5. Opening all remaining adjacent squares to a number square. If for example you have a square with the number 1 and you have already marked one mine in one of the adjacent squares you can left click on the 1 square and the remaining adjacent squares will all be opened. This can save a lot of time while trying to quickly clear out squares. If you press on a number where not all adjacent mines have been marked, e.g. the number is 3 and you've only flagged one adjacent square, then the squares will not be opened, to prevent you from accidentally clicking on a number and blowing yourself up! In the old Windows version of this game you used both mouse buttons together to perform this action, but here we just use a normal left-click.

Winning

You've won the game when you've opened all squares that don't contain a mine. If you've opened all the empty/nr squares but haven't flagged the mine squares remaining, they will be auto-flagged and you have won. So, essentially flagging is not required, it's only there to help you keep track of where you think the mines are. The real way to win is open all the non-mine squares. This can be used to gain a tiny bit of speed if you're trying to improve your time :)

Support for tablets and phones

If you’re playing on a tablet, mobile phone or other touch device you won’t be able to right click on the squares. To perform right-click actions you press the square you want to mark and hold until a box pops up showing a flag. If you keep on pressing down, the box will cycle through three states: Flag, Question Mark, Clear. When the box shows the state you want to mark the square with, simply stop pressing down and the square will be marked with that state.

I'm kind of unhappy with how slowly the touches trigger the actions in the game. If someone out there is an expert in JavaScript and 'touchstart' and 'touchend' events, please get in touch :)

Why on earth is Bill watching me?

You might have noticed that Bill is there, but doesn't really give you any hints or do anyting useful. He's just there because I like him, and in the old Windows game there was a smiley face above the puzzle that looked worried while you were clicking, and got sunglasses on when you won. I wanted something similar so I just used Bill for that :)

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