Grow a Fibonacci ladder by merging adjacent matching stages.
Fibonacci Merge gives the batch a sequence puzzle flavor. The board still uses merge groups, but the labels invite you to think about spirals, feeders, and adjacent steps. A good position has a growing number near the middle with smaller sequence pieces orbiting it. A weak position has impressive labels that cannot find the next supporting neighbor.
Tap a matching group to advance the sequence label. Diagonal contact is allowed, which makes bridge reading especially important. Keyboard players can move through the grid with arrow keys and confirm with Space or Enter. When several groups glow, prefer the one that keeps the upgraded number near another useful sequence step.
Scoring rewards level, group size, and continuity. A merge that extends your spiral usually pays better over the next few moves than a random high-value pop. Top displays the largest Fibonacci label reached, and Best is saved for later practice. The score is a trail of your planning quality: connected spirals survive, isolated numbers stall.
Build a loose spiral rather than a straight line. Keep diagonal bridges intact, leave small labels near the core, and use edge merges to feed the center instead of replacing it. If a refill creates two possible sequence routes, protect the one with more neighboring cells. The late game is about keeping the spiral flexible.
On phones, Fibonacci labels can be longer, so give yourself a moment to read them. Cursor buttons help when a diagonal bridge sits under your thumb. Portrait mode is good for full-board reading; landscape helps if the labels feel cramped. Confirm the highlight, then look for the next sequence step before making the next tap.
Build a loose spiral rather than a straight line.
On phones, Fibonacci labels can be longer, so give yourself a moment to read them.
Fibonacci Merge: Scoring rewards level, group size, and continuity
Grow a Fibonacci ladder by merging adjacent matching stages.