Free wall logic puzzle

Play Tapa Online

Shade one connected wall around numbered clue rings. Choose a grid size and difficulty, then solve a uniquely checked Tapa puzzle.

Grid size
Difficulty
Walls 0
Clues 0
Time 0:00

Loading a unique Tapa puzzle...

Preparing Tapa

The puzzle bank is choosing a uniquely solved wall puzzle for your selected size and difficulty.

What is Tapa?

Tapa is a logic and strategy puzzle about shading cells into one connected black wall. Numbered clue cells stay white, and the numbers tell you how the black cells are grouped in the eight surrounding squares.

This free Tapa online game includes 6x6, 8x8 and 10x10 puzzles with easy, medium and hard difficulty. Every base puzzle in the bank has been checked for a single solution, so the challenge is deduction rather than guessing.

  • Shade cells to build the black wall.
  • Never shade a numbered clue cell.
  • Read each clue by looking at the eight cells around it.
  • The clue numbers are the lengths of separate black groups around that clue.
  • All black cells must connect orthogonally, and no 2 x 2 block may be fully black.

How to play Tapa online

Click or tap an empty cell to shade it black. Tap the same cell again to place a small dot when you know it must remain white, then tap once more to clear it.

Use Check for feedback without revealing the answer. Hint adds a correct wall cell or removes a wrong wall mark, Solution shows the full completed board, and New puzzle loads another uniquely solved Tapa challenge for the same size and difficulty.

  • Start with clues that have one large number, because they often force a block of black cells.
  • Use multi-number clues to separate black groups with at least one white cell.
  • Mark safe white cells with dots when a clue group cannot pass through them.
  • Watch the whole wall, not only one clue at a time.
  • Avoid creating a fully black 2 x 2 square.

Tapa rules

A Tapa clue describes the black cells in the ring of eight surrounding cells. A clue of 3 means three adjacent black cells appear in that ring. A clue of 1 2 means one single black cell and one separate pair of adjacent black cells appear around the clue.

The order of the clue numbers is not important, but the groups must be separated by at least one white cell in the ring. Cells outside the grid count as white for edge and corner clues.

  • Clue cells are always white.
  • Numbers describe neighbouring black groups, not rows or columns.
  • Adjacent black cells in a clue ring belong to the same group.
  • Separate clue numbers must be split by white cells.
  • The final black wall is one connected shape.
  • A 2 x 2 square of black cells is not allowed.

Tapa strategy tips

Strong Tapa strategy starts with the clue ring. Check how many spaces are available around a clue, then ask where the required black groups can still fit.

As the board fills, wall connectivity becomes just as important as clue arithmetic. If a black mark would isolate part of the wall, or if a white dot would cut off every connection route, the opposite mark is often forced.

  • Around a 4, 5, 6 or 7 clue, look for cells that are black in every possible placement.
  • Around a 1 1 or 1 2 clue, look for the white separators between groups.
  • Use corner and edge clues early because the outside of the grid removes options.
  • Do not let the wall split into two islands.
  • Use the no-2x2 rule to force white cells near thick wall areas.

Tapa grid sizes and difficulty

Small Tapa puzzles are good for learning clue rings and group separation. Larger grids give the wall more room to bend, which makes connectivity and long-range consequences more important.

Easy boards have more direct clue placements. Medium boards combine clue logic with wall planning. Hard Tapa puzzles have fewer immediate moves and longer chains of deduction, but the checked puzzle bank still gives each board exactly one solution.

  • 6x6 Tapa is a friendly starting size.
  • 8x8 Tapa gives a balanced online logic challenge.
  • 10x10 Tapa adds more wall strategy and scanning.
  • Easy, medium and hard change clue density and deduction pressure.
  • Rotations and reflections add variety while preserving unique solutions.

Why unique Tapa puzzles matter

Tapa is expected to be a logic puzzle with a single final wall. If a puzzle has multiple solutions, a player may be forced to guess between equally valid boards.

The puzzles here are generated and checked against the Tapa rules before they are published in the playable bank. That makes the online game fair for daily practice, strategy learning and serious solving.

  • Unique puzzles reward deduction.
  • Hints and checks can compare your marks to one intended solution.
  • A single solution keeps the article rules and in-game feedback consistent.

FAQ

Tapa FAQ

What are the rules of Tapa?

Shade cells so each clue matches the black groups around it, all black cells connect, clue cells stay white, and no 2 x 2 block is fully black.

Can I play Tapa online for free?

Yes. This Tapa game is free to play in your browser.

Do Tapa puzzles need one solution?

Yes, a fair Tapa puzzle is expected to have one solution. Each base puzzle here has been uniqueness checked.

Which Tapa size should beginners choose?

Start with 6x6 easy, then move to 8x8 when the clue-ring logic feels natural.

Tapa solved!