Custom Minesweeper

Personnalisé
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Meilleurs du jour — Personnalisé

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Bienvenue dans les mines de Lady Di

Minesweeper.org propose le Démineur classique depuis 2000. Jouez en mode débutant, intermédiaire, expert ou créez vos propres grilles — tout gratuit, sans téléchargement. Défiez-vous sur le classement quotidien ou battez votre record personnel.

Custom Minesweeper — Your Board, Your Rules

Custom mode lets you set the board dimensions and mine count to whatever you want. A compact 5×5 with 3 mines for a quick puzzle, a sprawling 30×50 with 200 mines for a marathon session — every combination produces a different character of game. If the standard Beginner, Intermediate, and Expert sizes feel too rigid, Custom is where you tune the difficulty to match your skill level exactly.

Understanding Mine Density

The feel of a board is driven more by mine density (mines ÷ total cells) than by raw size. A few useful reference points:

  • ~12% — Beginner density. Lots of empty cascades, easy deduction. Good for warming up or learning.
  • ~16% — Intermediate density. Chains get longer, overlapping constraints appear more often.
  • ~21% — Expert density. Few zero-cells, nearly every reveal is a number. Logic-dense and unforgiving.
  • >25% — Brutal. Short deduction chains everywhere. Many boards require guessing even with No Guess off.

Setting mines to about 15–20% of total cells places you in the sweet spot between "too easy" and "too chaotic." Go higher if you want to practice reading dense clusters; go lower if you want to practice long cascade management and speed.

Interesting Configurations

  • 10×10, 15 mines (~15%) — A compact intermediate-feel board. Finishes fast, good for repetition training.
  • 20×10, 30 mines (~15%) — Wide and shallow. Emphasises horizontal reading and edge constraints.
  • 16×16, 40 mines (~16%) — Classic Intermediate dimensions. Use this if you want to practice the standard size without the official leaderboard pressure.
  • 20×20, 80 mines (~20%) — A square Expert-density board. Bigger than Expert in area but still readable.
  • 30×30, 135 mines (~15%) — Large intermediate board; excellent for practicing cascade management across a wide area.
  • 5×5, 5 mines (~20%) — Tiny and brutal. Almost every solve involves a guess. Good for studying corner and edge constraint patterns in isolation.

No Guess on Custom Boards

No Guess mode is available for custom boards, but its success rate depends heavily on your configuration. The generator uses constraint propagation and retries up to 200 times to find a board solvable by logic alone.

  • Low density (<15%) on larger boards works well — the solver finds valid layouts quickly.
  • High density (>20%) makes No Guess harder to satisfy. The generator may exhaust its retries and fall back to a standard random board. You'll see no warning when this happens.
  • Very small boards (under 6×6) have limited neighbor variance, so No Guess layouts are rare regardless of density.

For a reliable No Guess experience on custom dimensions, aim for 10–15% mine density on boards of at least 8×8.

Where to Go Next

  • Beginner 9×9, 10 mines. The classic starting point with a daily leaderboard.
  • Intermediate 16×16, 40 mines. The standard skill checkpoint.
  • Expert 30×16, 99 mines. The definitive benchmark.
  • Cylinder Custom-size boards where the left and right edges connect seamlessly.
  • Toroid All four edges connect — no corners, no edges, every cell has eight neighbors.
  • Hexsweeper Minesweeper on a hexagonal grid; six neighbors per cell instead of eight.