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Play Brick Out for free. Remove all the bricks from the wall by hitting them with the ball. A nostalgic game to take you back to the earliest days of video games!
A nostalgic game to take you back to the earliest days of video games! BrickOut! Keep the ball in play to remove all the bricks; use your paddle to catch falling bonus bricks that give you special powers! Remove all the bricks from the wall by hitting them with the ball. The game starts with a wall composed of 6 different colors of bricks: purple, blue, green, yellow, orange, and red. Every time you hit a brick with the ball, that brick is removed from the wall.
The ball will bounce off the top and sides of the screen. But if the ball disappears off the bottom of the screen, you will lose a "life". Keep the ball in play using your paddle. Hitting the ball with the left side of the paddle will cause the ball to angle off to the left, and hitting it with the right side of the paddle will angle the ball off to the right. The further the ball hits from the center of the paddle, the greater the angle. The speed of the ball is based on which color brick the ball most recently hit. The ball will be slowest right after hitting a purple brick, and fastest right after hitting a red brick. The wall of bricks will gradually descend. If any brick reaches the line near the bottom of the screen, the game will end. You start the game with 3 "lives"; if you lose your last "life", the game will also end. If you clear away all the bricks, the game ends successfully, and you receive a time bonus as well as a bonus for any unused "lives". There are hundreds of different levels in Brickout. Each level has a name, which appears in the upper right corner of the game. Some levels have a cavity with three trapped balls. Release these balls to get multiple balls into play at one time. Some levels even have several such cavities. Sometimes when you remove a brick, it will turn into a bonus brick, which will descend toward the bottom of the screen. If you touch a falling bonus brick with your paddle, you'll activate its powers. Some bonus brick have an effect that lasts only for a period of time. The Bonus Bricks legend in the lower right corner of your game screen shows how many seconds remain before a particular Bonus Brick wears off.
Wide Paddle - Increases the width of the paddle for a period of 15 seconds.
Slow Ball - Slows the ball speed by one-third for a period of 15 seconds.
Split Ball - Splits the ball into two balls.
Sticky Paddle - For the next 15 seconds, the ball will stick to the paddle instead of bouncing off it. You can then launch the ball wherever you like. Note that Sticky Paddle will not work if you have more than one ball in play.
Pause Brick Descent - Stops the descent of the brick wall, and the counting down of your time bonus, for 10 seconds. Pause Brick Descent - Stops the descent of the brick wall, and the counting down of your time bonus, for 20 seconds. Try to carve out a hole in the wall of bricks, and then sneak the ball through the hole to the space between the wall and the top of the screen. Since the red bricks, with their fast rebound, are usually at the top of the wall, this will clear out more bricks more quickly. Also, as long as the ball is bouncing between the wall and the top of the screen, you don't have to worry about losing the ball. Watch for those glancing blows off the corner of a brick that can suddenly change the direction of the ball. Note the value of a lost ball and the value of a falling Bonus Brick.
The first bricks were created by the Egyptians, over 6,000 years ago, carving them from sun-baked deposits of clay. The first intentionally kiln-baked bricks were made by the Mesopotamians. Early masonry used mud for mortar. Bricklaying took a huge leap forward when the Romans discovered the advantages of using cement-based mortar, and allowed them to build their huge roads, walls, and aqueducts, some of which are still around today. The Pantheon in Rome, built in the 2nd century, has a brick dome with a span of 142 feet - a span not exceeded in building construction until the introduction of structural steel in the early 19th century. Reddish-brown bricks get their color from the presence of iron oxide (in other words, rust) in the clay the brick was made from. Yellowish bricks, on the other hand, get their color from the presence of carbonate of lime (that is, chalk) in the clay. The most common type of automated brick making uses a device with the wonderful name of Stiff-Mud Machine.
Wrecking balls, swung from cranes to demolish masonry buildings, can weigh as much as 13,500 pounds!
It was like good old pong but better.
darkestglobe 3 years ago
We all remember the old pong game. Comadore 64? Nintendo? Sweet!
BEaSuperHappyShopper 3 years ago