List of games
Official Tetris games
- Main article: List of official Tetris games
Games by platform
Nintendo
- 4 Game Boy games
- 3 Game Boy Color games
- 3 Game Boy Advance games
- 2 Nintendo DS games
- 4 Nintendo 3DS games
- 5 Nintendo Entertainment System games
- 0 Famicom games
- 4 Super Famicom games
- 2 Super Nintendo Entertainment System games
- 4 Nintendo 64 games
- 1 GameCube games
- 1 Wii games
- 1 Wii U games
- 9 Nintendo Switch games
Sony
- 1 PlayStation Portable games
- 2 PlayStation Vita games
- 6 PlayStation games
- 3 PlayStation 2 games
- 2 PlayStation 3 games
- 7 PlayStation 4 games
Sega
Microsoft
Computer
Other
- 18 Arcade games
- 10 Web (Plug-in) games
- 10 Web (Native) games
- 24 Dedicated device games
- 36 Mobile phone games
Other "-tris" games
Some games used the Tetris name or its '-tris' suffix in their titles, despite their distinctively different gameplay. The list below includes both licensed uses and uses by developers who have also made an official Tetris game.
- Welltris, 1989
- Hatris, 1990
- Faces...Tris III, 1991
- Wordtris, 1991
- Tetris 2, 1993
- Tetris Attack, 1996
- 3D Tetris, 1996
- Tetrisphere, 1997
- Hatris (G-mode), 2006
- Tetris Blockout, 2008
- Tetris Super Jackpots, 2017
Notable unlicensed and similar commercial games
These are games with similar gameplay to Tetris that were sold commercially. In some cases a licence was not necessary due to the changes in gameplay (as in Blockout and Hexion).
- Blockout, 1989
- Atomic Point, 1990?
- Mosaic, 1990
- Puzzled (Joy Joy Kid), 1990
- Hexion, 1992
- Final Tetris, 1993
- Geom Cube, 1994
- Tetrin 55 (aka Picorin), 1996
- Tricky Towers
Fan games and other unlicensed games
- Main article: List of fan games
There are many fan made derivatives of Tetris. Sometimes these games infringed on copyright and/or trademark, though nevertheless a number of them have fostered a large user base and have achieved some cultural importance. Other notables use of Tetris include: art medium (see Tetris Building), algorithmic exercises (see Tetris AI), and even testing equipment.
- Tetris (ZX Spectrum, Andic Software), 1986
- Tetris (ZX Spectrum, V.A. Baliasov), 1986
- Pentix, 1986?
- Pentis, 1987
- Nyet, 1988
- Aint, 1989
- EGAint, 1989
- ТЕТРИС SEMIPRO-68k (aka Shimizu Tetris), 1989
- Wesleyan Tetris, 1989
- Xyonix, 1989
- Face to Face, 1990
- Twintris (Digital Marketing, programmed by Svein Berge), 1990
- Tetris 2 (Fuxoft), 1990
- Double Blocks, 1990
- Tetris Max, 1992
- DuelTris, 1992
- NYET III, 1993
- Tetris Building, 1995, 2000, 2002
- Tetrinet, 1997
- ACiD Tetris, 1997
- Quadra, 1999
- GTET, 1999
- Heboris, 2001
- Tetrinet2, 2001
- Super ACiD Block Attack, 2002
- Heboris Unofficial Expansion, 2003?
- DTET, 2003?
- Cultris, 2005
- Lockjaw, 2006
- Crystal Cubes[1][2], 2006
- Texmaster, 2007
- Full HD Tetris, 2008
- Tetris the Grand Master 3: Terror Instinct (DS version) [3], 2008
- Megatris (Uzebox) , 2008, runs on a Uzebox custom game console
- S.T.A.C.K.E.R., inspired by both Tetris and S.T.A.L.K.E.R., scored 6th on TIGSource.com demake competition. 2008
- NullpoMino, 2008
- Uehara Tetris, 2010
- Not Tetris, 2010
- Not Tetris 2, 2011
- Cultris II, 2011
- Falling Down, 2012
- tetr.js, 2013
- JSTris, 2014
- Blockdrop, 2016
- WorldWide Combos, 2017
Tetris as easter eggs
Due to its relative easiness to program, Tetris is often used as an easter egg.
- DOS Navigator
- emacs
- Mac OS X (part of emacs)
- µTorrent ( since 1.4.2 build 432)
- Flash MX
- Hewlett-Packard oscilloscopes
- Lunaris (Lunatic Rave 2 secret game mode)
- GAZelle Next trucks
See also
External links
- List of Tetris variants on Wikipedia
- Tetris licensees on MobyGames
- Tetris variants on MobyGames