News

Tetris for the NES (the overseas version of the Family Computer) slows down and makes it impossible to continue the game once a certain level is reached. A method was devised to exploit this slowdown ...
The two-hundred and ninety-five feet (ninety meter) tall Building 54 on MIT's Cambridge campus has become the canvas for a number of carefully planned and daringly executed visual displays over the ...
Earlier this year, we shared the story of how a classic NES Tetris player hit the game's "kill screen" for the first time, activating a crash after an incredible 40-minute, 1,511-line performance. Now ...
Nearly two years ago, MIT students completed the "<a href="http://americaninno.com/boston/2012/04/21/mit-completes-the-holy-grail-of-hacks-turning-the-green-building ...
Students at MIT took to the university’s Cecil and Ida Green Building over the weekend to transform the 21-story research building into an oversized, playable game of Tetris. Emulating the classic ...
Those damn college kids are always doing some prank or another, and this time they have done something really cool that isn't destructive! The kids over at MIT, one of the leading technology colleges ...
In a nutshell: A crafty group of gamers has found a way to slip custom code into unmodified copies of classic puzzler Tetris on the original Nintendo Entertainment System. It's an exploit that opens ...