
Village Arsonist Game Online - Play Free Fun Firefighter Browser Games
Get ready for a fiery adventure in Village Arsonist, a thrilling 2D physics-based puzzle game where revenge is the name of the game! The village has wronged you, and now it's time to set things ablaze. Your mission? Start a fire that sparks a chain reaction, engulfing the entire village in flames. Carefully plan your moves and use the environment to your advantage, ensuring every structure goes up in smoke before you can move on to the next level. With each new stage, the challenge grows - can you burn it all down? Play now and enjoy this explosive journey of fiery revenge! Have fun!
10,789 play times
How to Play Village Arsonist Game
Use your mouse or tap the screen to interact / drop torch.
Stop the Flames in Village Arsonist!
The village is under threat, and only you can stop the destruction in Village Arsonist! As a brave firefighter, your mission is to extinguish spreading fires, save buildings, and track down the source of the blaze before it's too late. Navigate through burning streets, use your hose strategically, and prevent chaos from engulfing the town. Can you outsmart the arsonist and keep the village safe? Grab your gear and jump into action!
Fun Facts About Lighting Matches
According to SwedishMatchIndustries.com and National Geographic there are many fun facts about matchsticks or lighting matches. Matches have been known centuries ago, but the earliest types were usually inconvenient, and expensive. Too often they were made of poisonous materials or gave off poisonous gases. A precursor of the match, small sticks of pinewood impregnated with sulfur were invented in China in AD 577. Matches appeared in Europe by about 1530. But the first modern, self-igniting match was invented in 1805. The first "friction match" was invented by English chemist John Walker in 1826. In the 1800s match factory workers were susceptible to "phossy jaw" which was a painful, condition caused by exposure to white phosphorus. Phossy jaw was lethal in approximately 20% of cases. Austrian chemist Anton von Schrotter discovered red phosphorus in 1845. Today's matches are easy to use, work well under most conditions, and are cheap and safe to use where reasonable safety is practiced. Every day, Swedish Match manufactures around 5 million boxes of matches in Sweden alone, which is equivalent to around 250 million matches.