Minesweeper is a single-player puzzle computer game. The objective of the game is to clear a rectangular board containing hidden 'mines' or bombs without detonating any of them, with help from clues about the number of neighboring mines in each field.
Short Description: Play the hexagonal minesweeper and clear the minefield! Long Description 1: Can you sweep the mines away without detonating any of them? In this minesweeper game with hexagonal tiles, your goal is to reveal the tiles and find out the 10 mines underneath.
The game originates from the 1960s, and has been written for many computing platforms in use today. It has many variations and offshoots.Some versions of Minesweeper will set up the board by never placing a mine on the first square revealed. Minesweeper for versions of Windows protects the first square revealed; from Windows 7 onward, players may elect to replay a board, in which the game is played by revealing squares of the grid by clicking or otherwise indicating each square. If a square containing a mine is revealed, the player loses the game. If no mine is revealed, a digit is instead displayed in the square, indicating how many adjacent squares contain mines; if no mines are adjacent, the square becomes blank, and all adjacent squares will be recursively revealed. The player uses this information to deduce the contents of other squares, and may either safely reveal each square or mark the square as containing a mine.HistoryMinesweeper has its origins in the earliest mainframe games of the 1960s and 1970s. The earliest ancestor of Minesweeper was Jerimac Ratliff's Cube.
The basic gameplay style became a popular segment of the puzzle game genre during the 1980s, with such titles as Mined-Out (Quicksilva, 1983), Yomp (Virgin Interactive, 1983), and Cube. Cube was succeeded by Relentless Logic (or RLogic for short), by Conway, Hong, and Smith, available for MS-DOS as early as 1985; the player took the role of a private in the United States Marine Corps, delivering an important message to the U.S. Command Center. RLogic had greater similarity to Minesweeper than to Cube in concept, but a number of differences exist:In RLogic, the player must navigate through the minefield, from the top left right angled corner to the bottom right angled corner (the Command Center).
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Surely Wheelock has its drawbacks and limitations,but it is still the best text around.A growing difficulty with the book has become apparent in recentyears, a problem that is entirely external to the text itself: students areless and less able to understand his explanations of Latin grammar becausetheir grasp of English grammar is becoming more tenuous. His exclusive emphasis on the detailsof Latin grammar squares with the general expectation that studentsacquire a rudimentary, independent reading ability in real Latin after onlytwo semesters of study. Imperatum ag. Latin Textbook (Based on Wheelock's Latin)STUDY GUIDE TO WHEELOCK LATINbyDale A GroteUNC Charlotte12/30/92PREFACE TO MY COLLEAGUESWheelock's Latin is now, and probably will be for sometime in the future, themost widely used introductory Latin book used in American colleges anduniversities. And with good reason.
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