Core Block Blast tips
1. Keep the middle flexible.
When the center fills too early, the whole board becomes harder to recover. Large shapes need central lanes more often than you think, so leave yourself room to work.
2. Avoid isolated one-cell gaps.
Tiny holes look harmless, but they make future placements less clean and often trap you into weaker clears. If you can choose between a tidy edge and a messy gap, take the tidy edge.
3. Place the hardest piece first when possible.
A common mistake is using the easiest piece immediately and then realizing the worst piece no longer fits. Always scan the whole set before placing anything.
4. Clear for space, not just points.
The best clear is the one that improves your future board. If a flashy clear leaves awkward gaps, it may be worse than a slower move that keeps strong lanes open.
Tips for surviving longer
- Leave room for wide and tall shapes even when the board looks comfortable.
- Protect at least one zone that can absorb awkward pieces.
- Do not make both edges jagged at the same time.
- When two moves score similarly, choose the cleaner board state.
- Review losses mentally and ask which earlier move created the real problem.
Where these tips lead next
If you want to go deeper than individual tips, the Block Blast strategy guide turns these habits into a fuller framework for board management. If you are still learning the basics, go back to how to play Block Blast.