Imagine a board that behaves like a mechanism.
You are not rearranging pieces one by one.
You are rotating entire layers of the system.
In BLOCK SHIFT, every swipe moves a full row or column in a continuous loop. Nothing leaves the grid. Nothing disappears. Elements circulate. Patterns evolve.
Your mission is precise: transform the current layout into the target configuration.
At first, the board feels manageable. A few shifts, and shapes begin to align. But very quickly, you realize something essential:
Every move solves one part —
and disturbs another.
This is a puzzle about sequencing.
About anticipating consequences.
About thinking two or three rotations ahead.
There are no random elements. No timers forcing urgency. The only challenge is structural reasoning.
As difficulty increases, grids expand. More block types appear. Some rows may resist movement. Certain directions may be restricted. The system becomes tighter. More interconnected.
Undo is available — because experimentation is part of mastery.
Hints exist — but clarity is more rewarding than assistance.
BLOCK SHIFT feels mechanical, almost architectural. Each solved level ends in a moment of perfect alignment — when motion stops and order locks into place.
Rotate with intention.
Rebuild the pattern.
Make the system click.