What is Fifteen Puzzle?
Fifteen Puzzle is a sliding tile game where you arrange numbered tiles from 1 to 15 on a 4 by 4 board.
Strategy and long-session games
Fifteen Puzzle is a classic sliding tile game with a move counter, timer, and local scores saved in your browser.
Regional page
This Canada page keeps Fifteen Puzzle close to the searches Canadian desktop players use. Slide one tile at a time until the numbers fall back into order. The game stays browser based, with no installer or launcher.
Quick answer
Fifteen Puzzle is a sliding tile puzzle on a 4 by 4 board. Move numbered tiles into the empty space until the board reads 1 to 15 in order. PCder keeps a local score list in your browser so you can replay for fewer moves.
How to play
Player guide
Fifteen Puzzle is easier when you solve it in layers. Finish the top row first, then the next row, and leave the final small square for careful rotations.
Solving
Fifteen Puzzle punishes random moves because solved tiles can drift apart quickly. A steadier plan solves the top row first, then the next row, and leaves the final cluster for rotations.
The empty space is your tool. Keep it near the tile you want to move, and use small cycles to shift a number without tearing apart the row you already solved.
Local scores
This PCder build saves scores in your browser. It does not send names, moves, or times to an outside score server.
Use the score list as a personal record. A cleaner solve usually means fewer wide loops and fewer times moving solved tiles out of place.
Common questions
Fifteen Puzzle is a sliding tile game where you arrange numbered tiles from 1 to 15 on a 4 by 4 board.
Solve it in layers. Finish the top row, then the next row, and use small rotations for the final tiles.
No. PCder saves scores locally in your browser.
Yes. After a win, the Share button opens a share action without loading social scripts during page load.
No. It runs inside the browser as a static web game.
Yes. The Canada page keeps Fifteen Puzzle in a desktop browser format with no installer, clear controls, and source notes. A school, office, or managed network may still block access.