

Breakout - Breakout Multiplayer Grátis: Dispute com Amigos na Mesma Parede de Tijolos
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Breakout Online: One Brick Wall, Everyone Racing
Foony Breakout is a free online breakout game where every player races through the same endless levels at once: clear your wall and the next, tougher one drops in. Your board fills the screen; your rivals' walls shrink to live mini boards beside it, crumbling in real time as the race tightens. Slide the paddle with your mouse or finger, bank the ball off its edges to carve angles, and watch bricks burst into confetti of shards as your combo counter climbs. The page loads straight into a lobby; there is nothing to install and no account required.
Single-player brick breakers have been around since 1976. The thing this page adds is the part the genre always lacked: someone to lose to. By default the round is endless, lasting until every player's last ball is gone; highest score wins, so every brick you bank is a brick your rival has to answer.
Multiplayer Breakout: Race Friends or Bots
Click "Play with Friends", share the room link, and everyone who joins races the identical sequence of levels (same layouts, same armored bricks, same everything), so the only variable is who plays them faster. Rooms comfortably seat small groups and scale to 100 boards for classroom-sized chaos, with every opponent visible as a live mini wall in the score rail, sorted by score.
Playing solo? Seat bots at five difficulty tiers: Rusty, Steady, Skilled, Expert, and Unstoppable. Rusty drops balls and dawdles between bricks; Skilled keeps a steady human pace; Unstoppable chews through whole levels at a frightening pace and essentially never loses a ball. Bots race on their own boards exactly like human players, and solo wins award XP scaled to the tier you picked.
Brick Patterns, Ball Speed, and House Rules
Levels are dealt identically to every board from nine stage shapes; the host can pin one shape, or let Random rotate so no two consecutive levels match. Five of the shapes:
Classic
Checker
Pyramid
Diamond
Fortress
Rings, Zigzag, Columns, and Cross fill out the set, and deeper levels raise the stakes: bricks gain armor (their color tells you how many hits remain), and immovable gray blocks appear that never need clearing. The host also sets the ball speed (Relaxed, Normal, or Frantic), the ball count (one to ten for the whole round, three by default), the round timer (Endless by default, or 30 seconds to 10 minutes), and whether powerups spawn. Or skip the dials and grab a ready-made race:
Sudden Death
One ball, frantic speed, 60 seconds. Drop it and you are done.
Fortress
Crack the armored shell to reach the soft wall inside.
Marathon
Five balls and five minutes for a long, cozy demolition.
A one-ball Frantic sprint is a very different evening than a ten-ball Relaxed marathon, and because every level is dealt identically to all boards, no one can blame the bricks.
How to Play Breakout
The controls fit on two cards:
Slide to aim
Move the mouse, drag a finger, or hold the arrow keys. The paddle tracks you one to one.
Click to launch
Click, tap, or press space to serve. The ball redocks after every lost life.
Aiming is the whole craft, and it works like this: where the ball meets your paddle decides where it goes next.
1. Center. Nearly straight up. Safe, predictable, slow.
2. Halfway out. A working angle for picking lanes.
3. The edge. Up to 60 degrees: tunnel fuel, at your own risk.
The ball chips any brick it touches, and a brick's color always tells you how many hits it has left, from one-hit coral up through five-hit pink:
50 pts
One-hit brick; armor scales to 420 for five-hit bricks.
0 pts
Gray bricks never break, and never block a clear.
+500 pts
Level-clear bonus, growing 150 per level.
Clearing a level deals you the next board immediately, with the same shape rotation racing on every opponent's screen. Each paddle save nudges the ball a little faster, so long rallies snowball; the speed is capped, but by the time you reach it the board feels twice as alive as the opening serve. Drop the ball past your paddle and you lose one of your balls; it redocks for a fresh launch until you're out. Bricks broken in a single rally (between paddle touches) feed your combo counter, complete with rising pitch pops and an on-board callout when it hits x3.
Powerups, Debuffs, and Lucky Blocks
With powerups on (the default), some bricks hide capsules that tumble down when broken. Catch one on your paddle and good things happen: Big Paddle widens your save zone, Multiball splits every live ball in two (a rarer capsule splits them in three), Dual Paddles floats a second paddle above the first, Laser Paddle lets you click to shoot bricks directly, Bomb Ball makes every hit splash damage into the neighbors, a rare Extra Ball banks a spare ball for the round, and the very rare Star Ball turns your ball into a rainbow wrecking machine that plows straight through bricks without bouncing, complete with its own theme music.
The red capsules are sabotage: catching one fires it at a random opponent (bots included, and bots occasionally fire back). Shrink Ray squeezes their paddle, Speed Surge cranks their ball speed, and Junk Bricks dumps a handful of debris bricks onto their board that they must clear before their level counts as done. And keep an eye out for golden, sparkling lucky blocks: smashing one pays real Foony coins on the spot. Most levels have none, some have one or two, and once in a very rare while an entire level comes up gold.
Brick Breaker Strategy
Brick breaker veterans will recognize the fundamentals; the race format changes which ones matter:
- Carve a side tunnel first. Use the paddle's edge to fire steep diagonals up one wall. Once the ball slips above the wall of bricks, it bounces between the ceiling and the brick tops, shredding rows for free while you rest the paddle under the exit hole.
- Route around the armor when racing. A five-hit brick pays 420 points but eats five hits a one-hit brick would each turn into 50. Open the soft lanes first, let combos build, and sweep the armored cores once your ball is hot (or save a Bomb Ball or Star Ball for them).
- Respect the speed ramp. Every paddle save accelerates the ball. Early on, centered saves keep angles predictable; late in a rally, give yourself margin: a max-speed ball off the paddle's lip is how last balls die.
- Play your ball count, not your pride. With three balls and no timer, greedy edge angles are worth the risk. On your last ball, flatten out, save safely, and grind; a frozen score wins nothing.
- Watch the mini walls. Your opponents' boards are live. If the leader's wall is nearly gone, abandon safety and gamble for the clear bonus; if everyone is drowning, bank steadily and let them drop their own balls.
Leaderboards, Achievements, and Unlocks
Your best round score feeds the Breakout leaderboards, filterable by day, week, month, year, or all-time. Four Breakout achievements mark the milestones that matter: Opening Break for finishing your first game, Demolition Crew for clearing every brick on a board, Untouchable for clearing a wall without losing a single ball, and Speedbreaker for a sub-60-second clear. The Breakout unlocks page carries account-wide cosmetics like custom cursors that follow you into every game on the site.
Every brick you break pays toward Foony coins and account XP that carry across the whole site, win or lose. Wins pay more, and solo wins scale with the bot tier you dared to race.
From Atari Breakout to the Google Easter Egg
Atari shipped the original Breakout arcade cabinet in 1976, with a prototype famously wired together by Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs before Apple existed. The formula (one paddle, one ball, a wall of bricks) spawned Taito's Arkanoid in the arcades and, decades later, the Brick Breaker game BlackBerry preinstalled on millions of phones, which is why half the internet searches for "breakout game" and the other half for "brick breaker." Same game, two names.
Many people land here looking for the Google version: from 2013 to around 2020, typing "Atari Breakout" into Google Images turned the search results into a playable board. Google has retired that easter egg, so the trick no longer works. The good news is that what you found instead plays the same classic game in any browser, plus the multiplayer race, the bot ladder, and the leaderboards a hidden easter egg could never offer. If brick-smashing arcade chaos is your genre, the dino-bombing mayhem of DinoMight makes a good second tab.