Snood

released on Dec 31, 1996

If Snood is new to you, then you probably don't download much shareware from the Internet. The color-matching puzzle game has been a mainstay on PCs for several years. It may remind you a little of Bust-a-Move, but its simplified game play and colorful characters add a new dimension to the fun. Fire colorful, little Snoods into each other so they cling together and then fall from the lineup.


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Uhhhhh...just feels like a weirdly jank, vaguely ugly version of Bust A Move? I mean it's free, and I do like the little character men, but it's a worse take on a concept done much better in other places. Deserves the weird meme status it has, I think.

Frick yall this game is fun. The bubble popper genre of game got destroyed during the rise of the mobile market of games but this game was peak when it released and it still slaps now.

A snood (/snuːd/) is a type of traditionally female headgear designed to hold the hair in a cloth or yarn bag.[1] In the most common form, the headgear resembles a close-fitting hood worn over the back of the head. It is similar to a hairnet,[1] but snoods typically have a looser fit,[2] a much coarser mesh, and noticeably thicker yarn. A tighter-mesh band may cover the forehead or crown, then run behind the ears, and under the nape of the neck. A sack of sorts dangles from this band, covering and containing the fall of long hair gathered at the back. A snood sometimes was made of solid fabric, but more often of loosely knitted yarn or other net-like material. Historically (and in some cultures still in use today) a small bag of fine thread—netted, tatted, knitted, crocheted, or knotted (see macramé)—enclosed a bob of long hair on the back of the head or held it close to the nape.[3]

Beard snood
Another similar garment which is also referred to as a snood is used to cover facial hair such as beards and moustaches when working in environments such as food production.[4] Although it appears that "hairnet" has replaced "snood" as the common term for hair containment on the head, the term "beard snood" (essentially a "ringed scarf") is still familiar in many food production facilities.[citation needed]

Religious use
Women's snoods are often worn by married Orthodox Jewish women,[5] according to the religious requirement of hair covering (see Tzniut). Since these snoods are designed to cover the hair more than hold it,[6] they are often lined to prevent them from being see-through. Contemporary hair snoods for Jewish women come in a wide range of colors and designs.[7]

Snoods are also worn by some Christian women as a headcovering in obedience to 1 Corinthians 11:2–10.

FORGET LIFE, PLAY SNOOD. DEHUMANIZE YOURSELF TO BLOODSHED. PLAY SNOOD. FORGET YOUR WANTS AND DESIRES. PLAY SNOOD. APPRECIATE ALL THAT YOU HOLD DEAR. PLAY SNOOD.

"my wife likes my snood."
"You're a lucky lucky man."