Let's start by playing a game of imagination. Picture Tetris, a popular video game invented in 1984 by Russian software engineer Alexey Pajitnov. Highly addictive and globally loved, Tetris requires strategic maneuvering and management of interlocking tetrominoes – geometric shapes composed of four square blocks each. They fall at varying speeds onto the flat matrix or playing zone, and your goal is to manipulate these pieces as they fall to create a horizontal line of blocks without gaps. When such a line is formed, it disappears and frees up the play space. With each level, the shapes descend faster, and the game intensifies. To stay in the game, you need to think quickly, strategically place your blocks, and manage your space efficiently.