The Watermelon GameVerified
About Game
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The Watermelon Game (often known globally as Suika Game) is an absolute viral phenomenon that brilliantly fuses the mathematical merging logic of 2048 with the chaotic, physics-driven physics of a claw machine. Set against a bright, ridiculously cute pastel aesthetic, players are tasked with dropping a constant stream of anthropomorphic fruits (cherries, strawberries, apples) into a confined glass box. The core mechanic is elegantly simple: when two identical fruits physically touch, they instantly merge and evolve into the next, significantly larger fruit in the evolutionary chain. The ultimate objective is to merge enough fruits to create the massive, board-filling Watermelon. The atmosphere is immensely satisfying but quickly devolves into frantic panic as the box fills up. The physics engine is the true star here; fruits are perfectly round, meaning they roll, bounce, and violently push each other around the box, completely ruining your carefully laid plans. The Watermelon Game is a masterpiece of unpredictable, physics-based puzzle design.
How to Play
- The primary objective is to survive as long as possible and score maximum points by merging fruits, ultimately creating a Watermelon.
- A cute cloud at the top of the screen holds the next fruit to be dropped.
- Use your
Mouseto move the cloud horizontally across the top of the box. - Click the
Left Mouse Buttonto drop the fruit into the box below. - When two identical fruits (e.g., two cherries) physically collide, they instantly merge into the next largest fruit (e.g., a strawberry).
- The game is instantly over if the pile of fruit physically crosses the dotted "game over" line at the top of the box.
Tips and Tricks
- Keep the Big Fruits at the Bottom: Your absolute highest priority is ensuring your largest, heaviest fruits (apples, peaches, melons) stay anchored near the bottom corners of the box. Never drop a tiny cherry directly in front of a massive melon, blocking it forever.
- Build Sequential Clusters: Try to keep your fruits organized sequentially. If your biggest fruit is an apple, try to build a peach right next to it, and a strawberry next to that. When you finally trigger a merge, the physical expansion will trigger a domino effect.
- Use Force and Wedges: Because the fruits are round, you can use physics to your advantage. If two apples are almost touching, dropping a heavy fruit directly between them can act as a wedge, forcing them apart and shifting the entire pile.
- Look Ahead: Always pay attention to the "Next Fruit" indicator. Knowing what is coming next completely dictates where you should drop your current fruit.
- Don't Rush the Drop: The physics engine takes a long time to settle. Do not rapidly spam-click drops. Wait for the pile to completely stop rolling and bouncing before committing your next piece, or it will bounce into the wrong spot.