![]() At first, you can do fine with one or two fingers, but progressively, as obstacles are introduced, you'll be needing all your fingers to go through levels. ![]() The way you slide a piece is self-explanatory, but sliding one piece to move another through the gap requires you to do this simultaneously, using two fingers. The real magic behind it is the game's multitouch functionality. The trick is to think carefully what you slide and where you slide it, lest you close the gap and have to start over. The path is not (always) clear, so you might need to slide some pieces out of the way before you can reach the destination and complete the Tangram. You're given the task to fit pieces available on the board onto a given shape, but you can only do this by sliding the pieces towards that shape. Instead of placing pieces altogether to fit a specific shape, or finding the shape amidst all the tiles on the board, the twist here is that the whole board is a trap. The game borrows some of the ideas from the Tangrams puzzles, but offers a completely new twist to the game. The game will have you twisting and twiddling your fingers in no time, hence a really effective name: Cross Fingers. Thankfully, Cross Fingers is here to quench my hunger, and I'm here to tell you that it's a doozie. ![]() It's puzzle-mania for me! Now I'm back to Tangrams (I was totally in the dark about this ancient Chinese game until LetsTans), but currently found a new appetite for this type of puzzles.
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