FLOWLINE: Connect Colors
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Playing: FLOWLINE: Connect Colors on COKOGAMES

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GAME INSTRUCTIONS

What is the goal of the game?

The game Flowline, also known as the colored pipes connecting game, consists of linking dots of the same color by drawing continuous lines on the screen. To successfully clear its 10 levels, which scale from an initial 5x5 grid to a final 9x9 grid, players must connect all color pairs and occupy every single dot on the grid without letting the lines cross or overlap each other.

Recommended age and educational level

This game is recommended for ages 6 and up, making it suitable for elementary school, middle/high school, and adults. Its core mechanic is perfect for elementary students as it boosts spatial awareness without requiring any prior academic knowledge. Additionally, it serves as an excellent tool for adults and seniors who wish to exercise mental agility, keep their problem-solving skills sharp, or train concentration through progressive logic puzzles.

How to play: single-player or multiplayer

Flowline is designed as a single-player local game that promotes concentration and self-improvement. However, it can easily be adapted into a collaborative group activity for classrooms or family settings. Teachers or parents can encourage players to work together to figure out the best paths for the lines, or take turns to see who can solve the grid with the fewest movements.

What do you learn from this game? Learnings and skills

This game primarily develops cognitive skills and logical-mathematical reasoning. Unlike similar puzzles, the challenge does not lie in avoiding complex intersections, but in spatial planning and strategic thinking to fill the board completely by snaking the lines in "S" shapes. Users enhance key mental processes such as decision-making, trial-and-error resilience, and resource optimization.

Tips to get the most out of this game

To get the most out of Flowline, players should leverage the in-game tracking system—which records moves made, the level's par, and the best score achieved—to challenge themselves and replay levels for a perfect run. As an unplugged resource (screen-free), teachers or parents can print out blank grids with colored dots for children to solve by drawing the paths by hand using colored pencils, or challenge them to design their own balanced custom puzzles for a classmate to solve.

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