The latest viral game the Internet is hyped about is the Watermelon Game (Suika Game). The rules may be simple, but the game is challenging to master, so here is the best strategy to win in the Suika Game (Watermelon Game).
Best Watermelon Game (Suika Game) Strategy
In case you are not familiar with the rules or the Suika Game or just want to know how to play the Watermelon Game, we’ve got just the article for you:
If you’ve played the famous “2048” game and its variants, you might be immediately familiar with Watermelon Game’s mechanics and probably know how you could beat it. Just in case, here are all the tips that have helped me make my very own Watermelon in less than half an hour of gameplay:
Memorize the Fruit Size Order
You need to memorize the fruit size order because it will help you plan your plays better. On Nintendo Switch, you always have a cheat sheet in the bottom-right corner which will show you the upgrade path.
Know the Fruit Merge Combinations
- Combine two cherries to create a strawberry.
- Merge two strawberries to make a grape bunch.
- Combine two grape bunches to create a dekopon.
- Merge two dekopons to make a persimmon (orange).
- Combine two persimmons to create an apple.
- Merge two apples to make a pear.
- Combine two pears to create a peach.
- Merge two peaches to make a pineapple.
- Combine two pineapples to create a melon.
- Merge two melons to make a watermelon.
- Note that two watermelons disappear when they touch.
Group Stack the Big Fruits in the Corner
Ideally, you should group (stack) the big fruits in one corner of the playfield. This will help you set up combos better. Remember how, in 2048, people stacked the highest numbers in the corner to create a perfect funnel? Here’s an example below, where you would technically need to find a way to form a new “256” and then perfectly merge it all the way to 2048, making a 4096. Now, that logic can be applied to the Watermelon Game as well.
256 | |||
512 | 256 | ||
1024 | 512 | 256 | |
2048 | 1024 | 512 | 256 |
On Nintendo Switch, you will know what your next fruit will be so that you can plan ahead by one turn. On the web browser version of the game, however, this is not the case.
Keep Physics in Mind
You can use certain fruit drops to nudge, push down, or otherwise move the already existing pieces with the power of physics to help them merge.
To succeed, drop smaller fruits onto larger ones, allowing them to roll down. Be mindful of physics and gravity—if a smaller fruit merges well, drop it; if it hinders a potential merge, place it elsewhere. Avoid scenarios where a smaller fruit, like a strawberry, falls between two larger ones, preventing a merge.
Be Patient
Be patient and think everything through. The game is not time-limited, and you are not aiming for a world-record speedrun (not until you master the game, at least).
Our Winning Watermelon Game Strategy
I’ve played around with the web version of Suika Game online, and here is a combo that I’ve made that should better clarify and illustrate my talking points from above. It all happened with one fruit drop!
If you can’t wait to merge two watermelons in the game all by yourself, on Prima, you can see what happens when you merge two watermelons in the Suika Game.