WrapSlide is a slide-puzzle (reminding of Rubik's Cube) consisting of a 6x6 grid of coloured tiles which are separated into four quadrants of 3x3 tiles. When it is unmixed all the tiles in a quadrant have the same colour. A move consists of sliding either the top, bottom, left or right two quadrants of tiles 1 to 5 units horizontally or vertically (tiles wrap around when moved). Stated differently, a move consists of sliding either the top, bottom, left of right half (consisting of 3 rows or 3 columns) relative to the other half, thus giving 4x5 possible moves to choose from. As with Rubik's cube the puzzle is to return it to its unmixed state after it is scrambled. (For the unmixed state we don't care which colour goes into which quadrant).
See this review on the puzzle for screen-shots and more detail.
The puzzle can be downloaded for free for Apple and Android devices on the iStore or Google Play. Just search for WrapSlide.
God's Algorithm refers to any algorithm which produces a solution to this type of puzzle having the fewest possible number of moves. God's Number for WrapSlide would be the number of moves this algorithm would take in the worst case to solve the WrapSlide puzzle.
A lower bound is 21, since there is one configuration known (so far), that can't be solved in 20 moves:
0 0 0 3 0 3
2 3 2 3 1 2
0 1 0 3 0 3
2 1 2 1 1 1
2 0 3 3 2 3
2 1 2 1 0 1
Solving just one colour can always be done in 12 moves or less, and solving the sub-puzzle of fixing 3 colours doing (say) only left and lower moves can always be done in 19 moves. Thus giving 12+19 as an upper bound. This is a very poor upper bound, but it is a start.