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Casual game playing off the idea of the Tetris genre, but with a twist: each 4-square block is composed of two kinds, orange and blue. Fill a row entirely with either one and it's cleared - but don't rely on the solidity of everything, as an orange can fall straight through a blue, and vice versa.

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Quatris 1.1

News

So, in about whenever time-units, we'll be releasing Quatris 1.1! It is an update to our earlier version of Quatris, featuring a basic achievement system, a number of different, BEAUTEOUS themes designed by our lovely art-master Gizmo, and pretty much a gazillion bug fixes (one of the most important ones being Linux support; sorry about that one, folks). The gameplay has also been improved.

Quatris - Minor bug fixes

Quatris - Minor bug fixes

News

We're hoping that we've fixed the last of the bugs with this update - highscores were sometimes failing to save on Stressed mode. We hope that we can...

Quatris - Free Release 1.0

Quatris - Free Release 1.0

News

Quatris is now available free download, in its first full-feature release. It is reminiscent of any of the many worlds of falling blocks and clearing...

Quatris nearing completion: new difficulties/game modes

Quatris nearing completion: new difficulties/game modes

News

Quatris is almost released. The last features include some new rule options and game modes, with the aim of more diversity in gameplay. Also, all-new...

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Quatris 1.0 (.app)

Quatris 1.0 (.app)

Full Version 3 comments

This is a native .app file for running Quatris on Mac OS X.

Quatris 1.0 (.exe)

Quatris 1.0 (.exe)

Full Version 2 comments

Our full release of the game! Requires Java. Please comment your thoughts below.

Quatris 1.0 (.jar)

Quatris 1.0 (.jar)

Full Version

Our full release of the game. Requires Java. Please enjoy, and comment your thoughts below!

Post comment Comments
jaredtbyrd
jaredtbyrd - - 2 comments

"There's always one more bug."
- addage taught to CS sophomores at my school.

Reply Good karma Bad karma+3 votes
Timeroot Creator
Timeroot - - 9 comments

"Unless you put your software through correctness-proving software.

Then there's always one more bug in the correctness-proving software."

Reply Good karma+2 votes
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