Category
page 1Falling block puzzle games
Tetris
Tetris () is a puzzle video game created by Alexey Pajitnov, a Soviet software engineer, in the mid-1980s. In Tetris, falling pieces consisting of four connected blocks, known as tetrominoes, must be sorted into a pile. Once a horizontal line of the playfield is filled with blocks, the line disappears, granting points and preventing the pile from reaching the top. This gameplay has been used in approximately 220 versions across at least 70 platforms. Newer versions frequently add game mechanics, some of which have become standard. , Tetris is the second-best-selling video game series, with ove

Dr. Robotnik's Mean Bean Machine
1993 video game

Yoshi
1991 puzzle video game
Gals!
is a manga series written and illustrated by Mihona Fujii. It was published by Shueisha and serialized in Ribon shōjo manga magazine from 1998 to 2002. The manga was also published in the U.S. by CMX. In 2019, Mihona Fujii announced that the series will continue from November 5 on Shueisha's Manga Mee app, taking off from the manga's ending.

Wario's Woods
1994 video game

Columns
1990 match-three puzzle video game

Meteos
is a 2005 tile-matching video game developed by Q Entertainment and published by Bandai for the Nintendo DS. Nintendo released the game outside Japan. It was produced by Q Entertainment founder Tetsuya Mizuguchi and designed by Masahiro Sakurai. Meteos was inspired by the video game Missile Command (1980), the film The Matrix (1999) and the television series 24 (2001-2010).

Klax
1989 video game

Kirby's Star Stacker
1997 video game

Sonic Eraser
1991 video game

Blockout
Blockout is a puzzle video game published in 1989 by California Dreams. It was developed in Poland by Aleksander Ustaszewski and Mirosław Zabłocki. American Technos published an arcade version. Blockout is a 3D version of the Tetris concept.

Block Hole
1990 video game

Suika Game
2021 video game developed by Aladdin X

Pac-Attack
also known as is a 1993 falling-tile puzzle video game developed and published by Namco for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. Versions for the Sega Genesis, Game Boy, Game Gear, and Philips CD-i were also released. The player is tasked with clearing out blocks and ghosts without them stacking to the top of the playfield — blocks can be cleared by matching them in horizontal rows, while ghosts can be cleared by placing down a Pac-Man piece that can eat them. It is the first Pac-Man game to be released exclusively for home platforms.
Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo
1996 video game

Polarium
is a 2004 puzzle video game developed by Mitchell Corporation and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo DS. It was a launch title in Japan, Europe and China. In the game, players use a stylus to draw lines on the DS's touch screen, flipping black and white tiles to clear puzzles.

Columns III
1993 video game

Hatris
is a 1990 puzzle video game developed by Alexey Pajitnov and Vladimir Pokhilko of ParaGraph for Bullet-Proof Software. An arcade version was manufactured by Video System.

Tricky Towers
2016 video game
Money Puzzle Exchanger
1997 video game

Baku Baku Animal
1996 video game

Polarium Advance
2005 video game

Tiny Toon Adventures: Wacky Stackers
2001 video game

Aqua Aqua
2000 video game

Tetris Plus
1996 video game
Gunpey
, often written as Gun Pey or GunPey, is a series of puzzle video games released by Bandai. It was originally released for the WonderSwan, and has been ported to WonderSwan Color, PlayStation, Nintendo DS and PlayStation Portable. The game was named as a tribute to the developer of the game, Gunpei Yokoi. He is known for developing several handheld consoles such as Nintendo's Game Boy, Virtual Boy, and Bandai's Wonderswan system. In the series, players move line fragments vertically in a grid in order to make a single branching line connect horizontally from one end to the other. The objective
Capcom Fighting Collection
2022 video game compilation