Mahjong Impossible and its full-screen pyramid of layered tiles
Mahjong Impossible asks you to clear matching tiles from a huge, full-screen pyramid, and the stacked layout blocks easy routes from every side. Every click matters because one exposed pair can open a new layer, while a bad choice can leave the board awkward.
As a logic game, it leans on reading the board before you act. The Mahjong tag fits the classic pair-removal rules behind the pressure, and the tall monument shape means you keep checking corners, edges, and upper layers for legal matches. That layout twist is what makes each clear feel like progress, because every open tile changes the next choice.
That is why the Difficult tag fits so well. Clearing one pair can reveal a better option or bury a needed tile under new blockers, so you have to think several moves ahead instead of clicking the first match you see. The result is a board-reading test, not a speed test.
Mouse clicks and the order that keeps the pyramid open
Use the mouse to select one stone and then its twin, so the whole session comes down to timing and board reading rather than fast reactions. Clearing the top layers first is often the safest way to keep the stack open, especially when several pairs are exposed at once.
It runs in your browser with no download, and you can Try it now if you want a tough browser break that rewards patience over button-mashing. If you enjoy layered boards, Mahjong Deluxe 3 shares the same tile-clearing focus. For a more traditional reference point, Mahjong Shanghai Dynasty keeps the classic matching rhythm on a cleaner setup.
Platform
Browser Desktop , Mobile and Tablet
Release
23 august 2019
Last Update
23 august 2019