What makes Hextris different from Tetris?
Hextris uses a rotating hexagon instead of a flat grid, so you manage six sides at once.
Quick play games
Hextris is easy to learn and gets tense fast. The hexagon shape also breaks up the usual grid of puzzle games.
Regional page
This Canada page keeps Hextris close to the searches Canadian desktop players use. Rotate the hexagon before the colors pile up. The game stays browser based, with no installer or launcher.
Quick answer
Hextris is a quick color-matching browser game. Blocks fall toward a central hexagon, and you rotate the center so matching colors land together. It starts simple, then gets tense once several sides begin filling at once.
How to play
Timing
Hextris punishes late turns. If you wait until the block is almost touching the center, you usually over-rotate and fix one side while ruining another.
The calmer plan is to rotate early, let the piece travel, and make one small correction before it lands. That gives your eyes time to check the other sides.
Board control
The board rarely fails all at once. One side gets a little too tall, then another side starts to match it. The round ends when you stop checking the quiet sides.
Use color matches to buy time, but do not chase a perfect clear. A modest clear on the tallest side is usually enough.
Common questions
Hextris uses a rotating hexagon instead of a flat grid, so you manage six sides at once.
Yes. It loads quickly and one round can be played in a small break.
Watch the next incoming colors and rotate early. Late turns are where most stacks get messy.
Only for a moment. Fix the tallest side, then scan the rest of the hexagon before the next block lands.
Matching colors clear when enough of them connect on the same side. The exact feel is easier to learn by watching which stacks disappear after a match.
Yes. The Canada page keeps Hextris in a desktop browser format with no installer, clear controls, and source notes. A school, office, or managed network may still block access.