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Minesweeper: how to play
Minesweeper is a deceptively simple test of memory and reasoning—and one of the most popular Windows games of all time. The goal: find the empty squares and avoid the mines.
Sounds easy, right?
To start a game
Click to open Games.
Double-click Minesweeper.
(Don't see it? You might need to turn on Windows Games. See Where are my games?)
Choose a difficulty level—Beginner, Intermediate, or Advanced.
To start, click a tile.
To save a game
If you need to finish a game later, you can exit the game and then click Save. The next time you play, you'll be asked whether you want to continue your last game. If so, click Yes.
To change game options
You can adjust the difficulty level, turn animation on and off, and more.
Click to open Games.
Double-click Minesweeper.
(Don't see it? You might need to turn on Windows Games. See Where are my games?)
Click the Game menu, and then click Options.
Make your choices, and then click OK.
To customize the game's appearance
You can change the board color, and whether it conceals mines or flowers.
Click to open Games.
Double-click Minesweeper.
(Don't see it? You might need to turn on Windows Games. See Where are my games?)
Click the Game menu, and then click Change Appearance.
Make your choices, and then click OK.
Minesweeper
Minesweeper: Rules and basics
The object
Find the empty squares while avoiding the mines. The faster you clear the board, the better your score.
The board
Minesweeper has three standard boards to choose from, each progressively more difficult.
Beginner: 81 tiles, 10 mines
Intermediate: 256 tiles, 40 mines
Expert: 480 tiles, 99 mines
You can also create a custom board by clicking the Game menu, and then clicking Options. Minesweeper supports boards of up to 720 squares and 668 mines.
How to play
The rules in Minesweeper are simple:
Uncover a mine, and the game ends.
Uncover an empty square, and you keep playing.
Uncover a number, and it tells you how many mines lay hidden in the eight surrounding squares—information you use to deduce which nearby squares are safe to click.
Hints and tips
Mark the mines. If you suspect a square conceals a mine, right-click it. This puts a flag on the square. (If you're not sure, right-click again to make it a question mark.)
Study the patterns. If three squares in a row display 2-3-2, then you know three mines are probably lined up beside that row. If a square says 8, every surrounding square is mined.
Explore the unexplored. Not sure where to click next? Try clearing some unexplored territory. You're better off clicking in the middle of unmarked squares than in an area you suspect is mined.
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