MABRJE,No disrespect, in the future if you define your question to a certain game or issue , and more detail we would gratefully like to help you as best we can, enjoy greenfelt play on.
Hi MABRJE, one way to check if a game is solvable is to hit the ‘high scores’ button before you play to see if anyone has already solved it. Obviously this will only work if the puzzle has already been played to its full potential by someone else, but if there is no ‘solved score’ you can move on to a new game until you find one that you know can be solved. This may help to avoid the frustration of not knowing whether to battle on with a game or whether to call it quits.
Whether a game is solvable, or not, is extremely subjective! Solvable to who or what... a person who's played these games, a couple of hours a day, for years; a person who's never played these games before and who only started playing ten minutes ago; anyone in between these two extremes; someone who's been subjected to any of life's myriad of variable states of health, happiness, knowledge, sleep, and interest; or a computer programme?
The beauty, or the conundrum, of the the whole thing is that only you will be able to tell if a game is solvable to you or not.
Or, as fingsaint says above, click on the high scores button, of a particular game, to see if others have solved it.
Very philosophical but true.I may add that one of the challenges of these games,at least for me,is the possibility that the seemingly insolvable may be resolved.However,each to is own
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pkease send only those that are solvable.
MABRJE,No disrespect, in the future if you define your question to a certain game or issue , and more detail we would gratefully like to help you as best we can, enjoy greenfelt play on.
Hi MABRJE, one way to check if a game is solvable is to hit the ‘high scores’ button before you play to see if anyone has already solved it. Obviously this will only work if the puzzle has already been played to its full potential by someone else, but if there is no ‘solved score’ you can move on to a new game until you find one that you know can be solved. This may help to avoid the frustration of not knowing whether to battle on with a game or whether to call it quits.
Whether a game is solvable, or not, is extremely subjective! Solvable to who or what... a person who's played these games, a couple of hours a day, for years; a person who's never played these games before and who only started playing ten minutes ago; anyone in between these two extremes; someone who's been subjected to any of life's myriad of variable states of health, happiness, knowledge, sleep, and interest; or a computer programme?
The beauty, or the conundrum, of the the whole thing is that only you will be able to tell if a game is solvable to you or not.
Or, as fingsaint says above, click on the high scores button, of a particular game, to see if others have solved it.
Very philosophical but true.I may add that one of the challenges of these games,at least for me,is the possibility that the seemingly insolvable may be resolved.However,each to is own
If I may add to the above,solitaire is also called patience [ US].Just an observation.
Just because a game isn't solvable, doesn't mean it's not fun to take the game to the max. Or... a game of Hopeless in one color mode.