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メモリーグリッド

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Memory Grid guide

Introduction

Memory Grid trains visual-spatial recall by briefly lighting a pattern of tiles and asking you to reconstruct it. Success depends on encoding positions as a shape instead of chasing individual flashes.

How to play

Begin the round and study every highlighted square during the preview.

After the highlights disappear, select the cells that belonged to the pattern.

Finish the reconstruction to advance; later boards demand a larger or denser memory trace.

Desktop controls

Click cells with the primary mouse button. Move in a deliberate scan order so you can verify rows and columns before confirming the pattern.

Mobile controls

Tap each remembered tile directly. Use a light touch and keep another finger off the grid to prevent accidental selections.

Scoring

Correctly recalled cells and completed patterns improve the result, while missed or extra tiles reduce accuracy. Clean rounds are worth more than hurried guesses.

Difficulty

Patterns grow more demanding as tile count, board size, or visual similarity increases. The blank recall phase removes landmarks and tests precise location memory.

Strategy tips

Group neighboring highlights into simple shapes such as corners, lines, or steps.

Mentally divide the board into quadrants and remember how many tiles appear in each.

Rehearse the pattern once from top left to bottom right before it vanishes.

Common mistakes

Naming every cell separately overloads short-term memory before the preview ends.

Tapping too quickly can add a neighboring square that was never highlighted.

Frequently asked questions

Is Memory Grid free to play?

Yes. Memory Grid is free in your browser and does not require an account or download.

What skills does Memory Grid train?

Memory Grid is designed to exercise memory and attention through short, repeatable practice.