

A big shout out to Lawman who bestowed this game upon me. With that said, its a tough price to beat and the game is competent. The Unreal engine logo is still on the menu bar.Įverything about Inferno Puzzle says its low effort. Work fire into the game, tiles should burn up as they dissipate. The game should use the inferno / Hades theme more.
#BEST PUZZLE GAMES OF 2017 STEAM FULL#
Other issues I have with the game is there’s no full screen, but there’s barely a title screen. When you score high enough, you move onto the next puzzle. These hollow tiles cannot be used and tiles will fall through them as if they were ghosts. The higher the puzzle, the more hollow tiles there are.

When you start the game, you select from an array of 21 buttons strewn about on the title screen. Its good to have an objective and to diversify these puzzles. Its never explained so I just assume that’s what it is. The thing that keeps my interest with Inferno Puzzle is there’s a goal, you have 10 moves to get some sort of score. There are plenty of games out there that do it better and look like a cohesive product rather than a mishmash of backgrounds, tiles and buttons blended together.
Its an enjoyable genre that I can get lost in. Getting four in a row results in the entire line being cleared, which I do enjoy. Once those are matched, they disappear and the higher tiles fall down because that’s how gravity works. The meters on the side look out of place.įor those unaware, match 3 games involve sliding tiles to match 3 or more colors in a row. The icons look like they’re different art styles taken from different sources, the buttons have no images on them so they’re just the default button. I find it to have absolutely everything: unobstructive start (straight to puzzle, no intro/video distraction), ramping difficulty, custom puzzles, clear practical yet pretty UI, puzzle reuse (production), alternative puzzles (boss levels), theme and storyline you can read into if so inclined, leaderboards putting your solution into perspective, multiple. The game is a mixture of hidden object finding, using the right objects from your inventory in the right places, and solving a number of relatively complex puzzles. I’d like it far more if I enjoyed what I was looking at. Drawn is a puzzle game full of beautiful artwork that very well fits its premise: entering magical paintings to gather clues and find ways of advancing up the tower to rescue the girl, Iris.
