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A popular use of tetrominoes is in the video game Tetris.

Counting rotations in two dimensions as equivalent, there are seven possible shapes:
I (also called "stick", "straight"): four blocks in a straight line
Square (also called "O", "package", "block"): four blocks in a 2x2 square
T: a row of three blocks with one added below the center
L: a row of three blocks with one added below the left side
J (also called "inverted L", "Gamma"): a row of three blocks with one added below the right side
S: bent trimino with block placed on outside of clockwise side
Z: bent trimino with block added on outside of anticlockwise side
When added the third dimension, there are three more patterns, all created by placing a unit cube on the bent trimino:
Left screw: unit cube placed on top of anticlockwise side. Chiral in 3D.
Right screw: unit cube placed on top of clockwise side. Chiral in 3D.
Branch: unit cube placed on bend. Not chiral in 3D.Some people refer to the pieces by the colour in which they are drawn in a particular implementation of the Tetris game, but those colours vary from implementation to implementation so this is not very sensible. For example, in many older versions of Tetris, the red piece is I.
| Piece | Vadim Gerasimov's
original Tetris | Microsoft Tetris | The New Tetris |
|---|---|---|---|
| I | red | red | cyan |
| Square | blue | cyan | white |
| T | brown | gray | yellow |
| L | magenta | yellow | magenta |
| J | white | magenta | blue |
| S | green | blue | green |
| Z | cyan | green | red |
See also: Domino, Pentomino, Polyomino
References: