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| Isabella Fraser (Hôte) |
Introduction Every once in a while, a simple yet surprisingly addictive game takes the internet by storm. Recently, the spotlight has turned toward the watermelon puzzle known as @Suika Game — a delightful mix of logic, timing, and physics that challenges you to combine fruits until you end up with one big, juicy watermelon. At first glance, Suika Game looks cute and casual, but don’t be fooled by its charming fruit designs and cheerful music. Beneath the surface lies a deceptively tricky physics puzzle where every drop, bounce, and slide matters. Whether you play it to relax after a long day or challenge yourself to beat your previous score, this game is easy to get into and hard to put down. If you've ever wondered why people everywhere seem obsessed with dropping fruit into a box, read on. This guide will walk you through what makes Suika Game so fun, how to play it step by step, and a few tips to help you turn your pile of pears and grapes into that elusive watermelon. Gameplay: How the Watermelon Puzzle Works The premise of Suika Game is straightforward, which is part of its charm. You control a dispenser hovering above a transparent container. From it, you drop different kinds of fruit—cherries, strawberries, grapes, oranges, and so on. Each fruit has a specific size and weight, and they tumble, roll, and bounce realistically once they land in the box. 1. The Rules Are Simple. When two identical fruits touch, they merge to create a larger fruit. For example, two cherries fuse into a strawberry, two strawberries turn into a grape, and this continues until you eventually create a watermelon—the final and largest fruit in the chain. The goal is to stack and merge efficiently without letting the fruits overflow from the container. Once the pile rises above the top boundary, it’s game over. 2. Physics Adds the Challenge. Unlike traditional matching games, this one relies on gravity and spatial awareness. Fruits roll unpredictably depending on how you drop them and what they touch. Sometimes a perfect merge can cause nearby fruits to jiggle and bump, forming a chain reaction. Other times, one wrong placement can send your entire stack wobbling dangerously close to the top. 3. Scoring and Strategy. You earn points for every merge, with bigger fruits giving better rewards. The higher your watermelon count, the greater your total score. The best players learn to predict how fruits will move and plan their drops carefully—not just to combine pairs, but also to create stable structures that can support larger fruits later. The magic of Suika Game lies in this balance between luck and logic. It’s relaxing enough to play casually, yet full of opportunities for clever play if you pay attention to how the fruits behave. |
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