• cloudless@piefed.social
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    14 days ago

    The strategy is actually quite simple. But even with the best strategy it still depends heavily on luck.

    • nyankas@lemmy.ml
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      14 days ago

      I‘ve recently stumbled upon Mindsweeper, which does a great job of removing all required guesswork and actually punishes you if you guess. I think it‘s a great improvement over the original.

  • Kratzkopf@discuss.tchncs.de
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    14 days ago

    I always found it fairly easy. You just have to chose the custom field size with 50*50 fields and 10 mines overall and you are good to go.

  • Barbarian@sh.itjust.works
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    14 days ago

    Ah, memories. Chilling’ in the IT lab at school, playing minesweeper during class when I hear my IT teacher behind me say “No, not that one, 2 to the left”

  • Klordok@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    I like minesweeper, but the guesswork is frustrating. Fortunately other games have improved the concept. Hexcells removes the guesswork and adds more logic elements.

    Dragonsweeper still requires some luck, but it has some interesting mechanics you can figure out on the end game screen. Also it’s free! https://danielben.itch.io/dragonsweeper

  • 0_o7@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    13 days ago

    Ah this is the game you click randomly at boxes and once it shows you lost, next player gets their turn.

    So much fun.

    I wonder what the numbers were for?

        • Björn@swg-empire.de
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          14 days ago

          Huh? In the Win 3.11 days the cheat only told you whether there was a mine or not, but not what number.

          I guess you could take your time and see if any of 9 fields contained a mine.

            • Björn@swg-empire.de
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              14 days ago

              We’re talking about the cheat code. It only showed whether a field had a mine or not. And if you want to be pedantic 0-fields don’t have a number, they’re just blank.

              • lugal@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                14 days ago

                I was talking about the fact that the first click always is a 0 (or blank) field. So the board can’t be already put before clicking so your cheat didn’t make much sense to me. But I never played on old windows, earliest version was 98 for me so they might have changed that

                • Björn@swg-empire.de
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                  14 days ago

                  There was a board before you started playing. But if you clicked on a mine of that board a new one was generated where that field didn’t contain a mine. Thus it’s ensured that the first click would always start the game. That first field could be one of any possible number from blank to 8.

                  Of course hitting a blank was preferred, but never guaranteed. And an 8 was very rare. I don’t think I’ve ever seen that outside of custom boards.

  • Catalyst@lemmy.ml
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    14 days ago

    Click and hope for the best kids. Last man standing wins absolutely nothing because no one knows what’s going on.