What TotalSolver Is
TotalSolver is built around a simple idea: if a player lands on a solver page, they should get a clear tool, useful guidance, and honest follow-up content without having to fight through vague advice first. That is why the site is structured around real user intent like solving a live board, improving score, fixing common mistakes, and understanding why some runs suddenly fall apart.
The site currently focuses on Block Blast, but the bigger idea behind TotalSolver is broader than one game. I like building pages where the tool does the immediate work and the content explains the decision behind it in plain language.
Why I Built This Site
I built TotalSolver because I kept seeing the same problem across game helper sites: the tool looked useful at first, but the page around it felt generic, rushed, or padded. The answer might be technically there, but it did not feel like it was written by someone who actually cares how players use it in real time.
A personal example is what happens during a tight Block Blast run. You are not looking for a long theory lesson in that moment. You want a board tool that helps you make the next move, and then you want short, sharp explanations that help you stop repeating the same mistakes later. That gap between tool and content is a big reason this site exists.
Games have been a hobby of mine for years, and I genuinely enjoy the problem-solving side of them. I like the moment where a messy-looking board suddenly becomes readable once you slow down and compare the options properly. That is the feeling I wanted this site to support.
What You Will Find Here
At the core of TotalSolver is a solver-first setup. That means tool pages for live board decisions, support pages for strategy and scoring, and follow-up content that helps users understand why they got stuck in the first place.
Some pages are built for fast decision-making, like the solver, screenshot solver, and manual solver. Other pages are built for long-term improvement, like strategy, score range explanations, beginner help, and mistake breakdowns. The point is to keep everything connected so the site feels like one system rather than a pile of disconnected articles.