11/20/2022 0 Comments Microsoft Minesweeper![]() ![]() ![]() Clicking on the game board will reveal what is hidden underneath the chosen square or squares (a large number of blank squares may be revealed in one go if they are adjacent to each other). The location of the mines is discovered by a process of logic. The goal of the game is to uncover all the squares that do not contain mines without being "blown up" by clicking on a square with a mine underneath. In the Windows Vista version of the game, the player can pick whether they would like to play with mines or flowers. In some markets, Minesweeper was rebranded as Flower Field, with flowers replacing the mines in game, likely to avoid potential controversy due to mines being used in wartime. In Windows 8 and later the game is not included, but a free equivalent developed by Arkadium it is available from the Windows Store. An updated version included in Windows Vista and Windows 7 was developed by Oberon Media. Microsoft Minesweeper has been included in all subsequent Windows releases until Windows 8. First officially released as part of the Microsoft Entertainment Pack 1 in 1990, it was included in the standard install of Windows 3.1 in 1992, replacing Reversi from Windows 3.0. X86 and 圆4 Microsoft Minesweeper (formerly Minesweeper) is a minesweeper computer game created by Curt Johnson, originally for OS/2, and ported to Microsoft Windows by Robert Donner, both Microsoft employees at the time. ![]()
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