

When you select a tile without a mine below it, that square tile will show a number from 1 to 8, with each number being the number of mines adjacent to the uncovered square. If you somehow select tiles with any mines underneath them, all the mines will explode and the game would be over. Once the game starts you should use both logic and some guessing in order to uncover tiles without mines. As you choose higher levels of difficulty, the number of tiles on your grid and the number of mines hidden underneath those tiles increase. Once you open the video game on your device from an installed app or with an internet browser, you will have the option to choose from three levels of difficulty, “beginner”, “intermediate”, and “expert”.
GAMES LIKE MINESWEEPER OFFLINE
Since then, the video game has appeared in almost all windows formats in offline or online mode. When Windows 3.1 was introduced in the early 1990s, the company decided to add Minesweeper as a standard installation in the operating system. The game was first released by Microsoft officially in 1990 as part of Microsoft Entertainment Pack 1.

Oberon Media later added more colour patterns into the gaming grid and collaboration between Arkadium and Microsoft Casual Games gave more options to the players. The users should uncover each tile on the grid without activating any bomb. Created by Curt Johnson, Minesweeper is a type of video game in which gamers should uncover all square tiles in a grid where mines are hidden in unknown places. Minesweeper video game published by Microsoft in 1990 is one of the most famous video games in the history of games and entertainment.
