Play Bloko online with friends for free
Starting the Game
The first figure placed by each player should be placed in their corner [matching color].

All following figures need to be placed with 2 rules:
- Each figure must touch at least one other figure of the same color but only at the corners.
- Figures of the same color can not touch along the side.

Playing the Game
Each placed figure increases your score by the amount of blocks it has.
- Figure Points:
- 1 - square : +1
- 2 - square : +2
- 3 - square : +3
- 4 - square : +4
- 5 - square : +5
Once a figure is placed on the board it cannot be moved.
If you are unable to place a figure on the board, your turn is passed.
If during 3 moves in a row you don't make any manipulations with the placing figure [move/rotate/flip] you automatically resign from the game.
Scoring
Once the game ends, players count the number of squares in their remaining figures. Each remaining square is -1 point.
The player who places all their figures on the board earns +15 points when their last figure is used. If the last figure placed is the smallest pice (1x1 block) you get +20 points.
The player with the highest score wins.
Top Ranked Winners
Can I play online?
Yes. Install the Plato app on iOS, Android, or macOS to play the full catalog with friends or matchmade opponents. You can also play Ocho online in your web browser — no install needed.
Can I play with friends?
Yep. Tap Create Private Game, then share the invite link or invite from your contacts. When they tap Accept, they're seated at your table.
Is it free?
Yes — free to play and ad-free. If you buy something, it's for looks (themes, profile flair), not power.
Is it fair?
Shuffles, deals, dice, and timers run on Plato servers, not your device. Everyone plays by the same rules and no one can peek at hidden information.
Is it safe?
You can block and report from profiles or chat. Public spaces use filters and human review. Some rooms use Chat Pass to deter spam, and privacy controls let you limit who sees you online.
Live vs. turn-based: what’s the difference?
Both are turn-taking; the difference is the clock. Live uses short timers for quick back-and-forth. Turn-based gives you longer — often up to 24 hours per move in games like Chess — so you can play at your pace.
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