Your data. Your choice.

If you select «Essential cookies only», we’ll use cookies and similar technologies to collect information about your device and how you use our website. We need this information to allow you to log in securely and use basic functions such as the shopping cart.

By accepting all cookies, you’re allowing us to use this data to show you personalised offers, improve our website, and display targeted adverts on our website and on other websites or apps. Some data may also be shared with third parties and advertising partners as part of this process.

Background information

Minesweeper turns 35 – the camouflaged office drug

Martin Jud
8.10.2025
Translation: Elicia Payne
Pictures: Martin Jud

35 years of Minesweeper. The recipe for success? A few clicks and a whole lot of risk. You had to take risks in the game, but also in the workplace.

A grid of grey fields – a digital minefield. With one click, you’re exposed. Numbers show how many mines are adjacent. You need logic to survive. One step wrong, you’re out. It’s that simple. That brutal. And so addictive.

Once you’d started, you didn’t want to stop. Another click, another number, another pattern – and the next round was there. Minesweeper wasn’t a game with levels. It was a state. And in some cases, it still is today.

Even after 35 years, Minesweeper lives on – quieter than ever, but always ready to ruin your concentration. Miss playing it? You can find it in the Microsoft Store. Click. Count. Risk. And sometimes… boom!

32 people like this article


User Avatar
User Avatar

I find my muse in everything. When I don’t, I draw inspiration from daydreaming. After all, if you dream, you don’t sleep through life.


Background information

Interesting facts about products, behind-the-scenes looks at manufacturers and deep-dives on interesting people.

Show all

These articles might also interest you

  • Background information

    New research discovers how to perform the perfect cannonball

    by Michael Restin

  • Background information

    Squid Game on the Game Boy: fan project brings Netflix hit to the retro classic

    by Kim Muntinga

  • Background information

    Pocket Bard – the sound app for board games

    by Ramon Schneider