Steal Brainrot Online
Obby Climb and Jump
Fish It
Animal Rampage 3D
Farm Ring Idle
Parking Jam
Bad Egg
Blaze Drifter
City Builder
Bubble Woods
Idle Dairy Farm Tycoon
Hedgies
Farmerij Merge
Farming Life
DEADSHOT.io
Mr Racer
Mergest Kingdom
Survival Race
Cow Bay
Farm Land - Farming Life Game
Slope 3
Farm Day Village
Ragdoll Drop
Obby: Ice Slide +1 Speed
Butterfly Shimai
Butterfly Shimai is more than a Mahjong game. It's a calm journey of resource and space management. Master the butterfly flocking technique for high scores!
Releasing The Flock in Butterfly Shimai
The Unique Twist
In traditional Mahjong Connect games, you simply remove pairs of tiles. But in Butterfly Shimai, each tile is half of a butterfly wing, and your true goal is to set them free to soar. This creates a unique strategic element:
- The feeling of absolute tranquility doesn't come from completing the level, but from the moment two wing halves connect and fly up - a visual reward for your absolute focus.
- You must calculate the maximum three-line path to connect two identical wing halves. The key is not just finding available pairs, but clearing away obstructing pairs to create clear, open lines for the trapped butterflies inside.
Controls
- Use the mouse to connect tiles together.
Butterfly Shimai Tips
- Always start by eliminating the butterfly pairs along the border of the play area. They are the easiest obstacles to remove and quickly free up space for the next move. Highest priority goes to pairs with existing 1- or 2-line paths.
- After clearing the edge, move to the pairs in the second layer. The goal here is to create large gaps, allowing you to connect the pairs in the core layer using the 3-line path that loops around those newly created openings.
- Butterfly pairs locked deep inside can only be released when you create enough open space to draw the winding 3-segment connection line through the empty tiles.
Remember: A level in Butterfly Shimai doesn't end when you find a pair. It only ends when you establish a continuous flow of released butterflies, like an uninterrupted state of meditation.