“…The same approach—non-spherical building units provided with a discrete number of bonding sites—can be also applied at the nanometer scale: DNA origami of different shapes have been programmed to assemble into prescribed two-dimensional tilings by taking advantage of blunt end stacking and hybridization sites, thus providing versatile platforms to engineer optical metamaterials and biomimetic tissues [ 18 , 19 , 20 , 21 , 22 ]. At even larger length scales, micrometer non-spherical colloids decorated with attractive spots along their perimeter also form two-dimensional aggregates whose complex geometries can be related to the properties of the constituent units [ 23 , 24 , 25 ]: close-packed versus porous, surface structures, as well as finite clusters with specific architectures can be designed by tailoring the single particle features [ 26 , 27 , 28 , 29 , 30 ]. Colloidal platelets with non-spherical shapes and directional bonding sites—often referred to as patches—constitute an ideal playground for testing and understanding the driving mechanisms of two-dimensional tilings.…”