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Your First Hour in Block Blast
お名前 : Block blastE-mailHP

Introduction https://blockblastfree.com
Block Blast is welcoming on the surface: tap blocks, complete lines, watch them disappear. But new players often hit a wall around the 5-minute mark when the board starts filling faster than they can clear. The panic sets in. Placements become desperate. Game over. If you're starting Block Blast for the first time, the difference between a fun experience and a frustrating one comes down to one mental shift: stop trying to fill the grid, and start trying to empty it.

Content
Lesson 1: Clears are better than fills
Your instinct is probably to place blocks wherever they fit. Stop. Instead, ask: "Does this placement create a clearable line?" If yes, place it there even if it seems wasteful. If no, find a spot that sets up a future clear. This single habit will double your survival time in early games.

Lesson 2: The grid is your enemy, not your friend
Empty spaces are luxury. Your goal isn't to fill the grid efficiently—it's to keep the grid empty. This means:

Clear lines aggressively, even if it seems early
Don't hoard blocks waiting for perfect placements
Trust that new pieces will keep coming
Lesson 3: Recognize your "safe zones"
After a few games, you'll notice certain areas of your grid clear easier than others. Maybe you're better at horizontal lines on the left, or vertical stacks on the right. Develop a bias toward those areas. It's not optimization—it's confidence.

Lesson 4: The first few blocks set the tone
Unlike Tetris where early blocks don't matter much, in Block Blast your first 3-4 placements shape your entire run. Don't autopilot them. Think about:

Where will I build my first clear?
What pattern am I creating for future pieces?
Do I have a backup plan if a piece doesn't fit where I wanted?
Lesson 5: Panic is your worst advisor
When the board starts filling, your brain screams "place something NOW." Don't. Pause. Breathe. Look for the best spot, not just a spot. Most games end not because you ran out of space, but because you stopped making good decisions.

Quick beginner tips that work immediately
Color isn't destiny: Ignore cosmetics. Focus on shape and position.
Build toward centers: Edges and corners are harder to clear; centers are forgiving.
Leave gaps intentionally: A planned gap is valuable real estate; an accidental gap is a mistake.
One big clear beats three small ones: Prioritize lines that give you space breathing room.
Conclusion
Block Blast rewards players who shift from "filling" mentality to "clearing" mentality. Once you embrace that your job is emptying the board—not crowding it—the game becomes dramatically easier and way more fun. Give yourself permission to leave gaps. Your future self will thank you.

投稿日時:2026年01月17日(Sat)17時31分 (No.105693)