Playing the game

a notice before I begin explaining

Please visit my homepage.

If my english really irritates you, because its so bad: please send me an email!

Well I hope that you're gonna like this game. Please notice that each file is about 18kB and has an additional .js file attached to it of approximately 1-1.3kB. If you're going to play all the games download them. I don't care about the speed of the server. But playing the game could take a while, especially when your computer is slow. All the .js files are named the same as the .html files to which they are attached.

the rules

The task is to discover a fleet. The fleet consists out of one battle ship, two crusers, three torpedo-hunters and four submarines. In this game the goal is to discover each location of the ships.

When you start the game you will see about a hunderd buttons before you. On some of them there have markings. A marking will be called a ship-element. The markings could be the following:

/\ or
[] or
\/ or
<: or
:> or
( )

( ) is a submarine
/\ or \/ or <: or :> are equivalent in this game: They are the heads or the tails of the ships (not submarines), according to there position in the field. Which is represented by the buttons.
[] is the body of the ships. Note: torpedo-hunter don't have a body. The battle ship has two [] and the crusers only have one [].

At the side you will see numbers. These numbers represent the number of ship elements in the colum or row, in which those numbers lie. Each ship consists out of these ship elements, as folows:

battle ship:   <:[][]:>

crusers:   <:[]:>

torpedo-hunters:   <::>

submarines:   ( )

By clicking on the buttons you can change the values of the buttons. This means that they will display different ship-elements when you click on them. They can also show you the sign " $$ ", which means water, or the sign "   " the last one has the meaning unknown. The ship elements must be logically chosen. This means that when you choose a head or a tail it must lay in the direction of the ship (the smallest part of the head or tail the furthest away).

There are now more then twenty-five games:
1| 2| 3| 4| 5| 6| 7| 8| 9| 10| 11| 12| 13| 14| 15| 16| 17| 18| 19| 20| 21| 22| 23| 24| 25| 26| 27| 28| 29| 30

© copyright Harmen Alfred Leusink, 1998. All Rights Reserved.
Comments... Mail Me