

Added bombs, new special block types, and two-player co-operative and competitive modes. Features 10 themed difficulty levels and a head-to-head mode.ĭeveloped by Sphere, Inc. The player must arrange falling pieces to form a complete face, which include famous historical figures. Alexey Pajitnov's fourth and final official game in the "Tris" series. Winner of the 1991 Software Publishers Association Excellence in Software Award for Best Action/Arcade Program. A variety of hats must be made to fall into stacks of five identical hats. Part of the Microsoft Entertainment Pack.ĭesigned by Alexey Pajitnov. ZX Spectrum, CPC, C64 (1991, Infogrames).Amiga, Mac OS (1990, Infogrames, Spectrum HoloByte ).The game ends when four walls are no longer accessible. When a piece lands while fully or partially sticking outside of the well, the wall is temporarily blocked. Pieces (including tetrominoes and occasionally pentominoes) slide down one of four wall surfaces in a well, the "well" being an 8x8 square. Pulled from shelves following a court ruling.īundled in the North American and European releases of the Game Boy itself and the first game compatible with the Game Link Cable, a pack-in accessory that allowed two Game Boys to link together for multiplayer purposes.ĭesigned by Alexey Pajitnov and developed by Doka. A new version based on arcade version was released on the Sega Genesis Mini in 2019.


Mega Drive version developed by Sanritsu Denki, which was cancelled, resulting in less than ten copies being printed. In Japan, it was the highest-grossing arcade game of 1989, and remained among the top ten annual highest-grossing arcade conversion kits through 1995. Sega's arcade version of Tetris was released in December 1988. This version is also available on AtGames' Legends Flashback console. Amstrad CPC, Amstrad PCW, Amiga, Atari ST, BBC Micro/ Acorn Electron, Commodore 64, MSX, ZX SpectrumĪmiga, Apple II, Atari ST, Apple IIGS, IBM PC, MS-DOS, Mac OS
