domino effect

Yesterday afternoon, my father got off work early. When I finished all the tasks, I invited my father to play with me. Dad is very happy to play in the tent with me. How happy I am!

? We played with a small piece of wood that I could read when I was a child. My father and I first built a tunnel, a pedestrian street, a big playground and a computer room. Later, my father and I had a competition to see who could make everything fall down by moving a building block. Dad moved a piece in the middle of his house and it collapsed with a crash. I moved a piece on the edge of the bottom of the tower, and the tower collapsed when I pulled it out, because the piece I pulled out was a support point for the whole tower.

After playing enough games, I came up with a new way to play, that is, put the building blocks next to each other. The gaps between the building blocks are equally large and long. When you pushed them, they all fell down. It was fun. My dad and I also posted a lot of pictures in this way, and if you push one, it will all fall down. My father and I both enjoyed the visual pleasure at that moment and laughed. My mother came over when she heard our laughter. We quickly put a butterfly on our mother. I showed it to my mother, and it was all knocked down. My mother asked me and my father's names. We all said we didn't know. My mother told us it was called the domino effect. I was curious, so I quickly checked the domino effect on the Internet:

In an interconnected system, a small initial energy may produce a series of chain reactions, which is called "domino effect" or "domino effect".

A very small thing can crush the whole earth by exchanging energy with some force. This is called domino mechanics.

In an interconnected system, a small initial energy may produce a series of chain reactions, which we call "domino effect" or "domino effect".

It turns out that the building blocks I play with still contain so much knowledge!