This is one of those reviews where you struggle to write about the game when the game is so simple. Obviously those that have gaming OCD will struggle most, i am able to leave a level at two stars, but I know that there are some people who enjoy gaining the elusive three stars on each and every level. It’s this replayability that will keep you coming back to the game, keep you striving to gain those three stars. Mahjong Deluxe 3_20170212185208įull trophy support although no platinum trophy is given for this title, but the trophies will take a while to play through to get 100% with you being required to gain three stars on every level to a particular world, 80 in total per world. Upon completion of a level you are given a score out of three stars depending on your score, that is accumulated by matching pairs quickly, a timer in the top right counts down between each successful matches and this score is added to your total. It’s this simplicity that has seen the Mahjong Deluxe series downloaded over 15 million times across all platforms.Įach level you play has a random tile order which means that no round will ever be the same, allowing an unlimited replay factor. It’s all effective, and the music in the background is strangely relaxing. Once matched you have a satisfying sound effect that varies depending on whether you select the bamboo numbers or one of the many coloured dragons. The game plays nice and easy, moving your pointer around the screen you find a tile, click it and then find its pair. The best addition that you might enjoy is the move onto 3D puzzle boards, allowing you to rotate in any direction the puzzles to find pairs, these also range from relatively straight forward to the ridiculously complicated. So what is new about Mahjong Deluxe 3? Not a lot, the game covers 8 worlds with a grand total of 640 puzzles ranging from nice and easy to ridiculously complicated puzzle boards. Puzzle games are scarily addictive and even more scarily simplistic in their design, find a pair, essentially that is the essence of the game. Having got the opportunity to give the latest version of the matching pairs game by EnsenaSoft a playthrough I couldn’t resist. These games have been released year after year on various formats and yet they always seem to pop up so there must be a fan base out there somewhere. Mahjong, the tile-based puzzle game from China during the Qing Dynasty has yet another released as a video game.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |