HOW TO PLAY

Click the icon to start DynaMate, then drop a level there to start the game. (you can drop everything, but it's in most cases pretty useless)

You move pieces by dragging them. A piece slide until it hit something. If it slides out of the game the level is abandoned. If a piece has a circle around it it can't be moved.

The goal of the game is to get rid of all stones (red, green, blue, black, yellow). If certain stones collide in certain ways they both dissapear. The following moves causes the involved stones to dissapear:

A red stone dragged to a green.
A green stone dragged to a blue.
A blue stone dragged to a red.
(note the circularity)

A black stone dragged to any other stone.
Any stone(exept yellow) dragged to a yellow
(note the hierarcy)

If stones collide in any other way the dragged stone just stops. (wich will show essential to the game later)
If a red is dragged on a row of green they all will dissapear, the domino effect. the same holds for a black dragged to a row of stones in all colours.
The above described is the only way of getting rid of stones.

Observe: With stones is meant only the red, green, blue, green, black, yellow. The others are called pieces.
Now you know enough to play the level called tutorial. Do that.

The all gray piece is the boring guy around here. It is used to stack other pieces on. (you stack stones on stones to, if they are stacked in the right order)

The piece with a lightning is a teleporter, they work in pairs only. If something enter one of them it exits the other with unchanged direction. If you drag one teleporter to the other it just continues right through it.

The piece that looks like small red, green, blue stones cykles the colour of red, green and blue stones.

The piece with straight arrows on it only let pieces through in the direction of the arrow.

The piece with a circular arrow on it cycles the direction of the piece dragged to it.

The skull abandones the level when something is dragged to it.

The white piece with a number makes the following (number on piece) moves "one step at a time".