Two Picross Games: Picross DS and Gemsweeper PC

Back when I had my GBA, I really wanted the Nintendo Picross game, but it was really hard to find here in the states. I guess because of the wholly superficial resemblance to Sudoku, there are suddenly myriad versions of Picross available. I’m going to talk about and/or review two picross games: Picross DS for the Nintendo DS, and Gemsweeper for Windows PCs.

Picross DS

Picross DS is a straight-up Picross game. Thank you, Nintendo.

Picross DS box art

The upsides here are:

  • Hand-held Picross goodness
  • Many single player levels
  • Awesome head-to-head Picross via Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection
  • Puzzle editor
  • Share your own puzzles via Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection
  • (Supposed) downloadable Picross levels from the previous Nintendo Picross games that Nintendo has offered
  • Low low price of $19.99.

The downsides here are:

  • The downloadable games are all “coming soon”
  • I am not at all happy with the zoom scheme they came up with for the larger puzzles. It’s really hard to keep track of the big picture while you work, at least for me.

So as you can see, the score is 7 to 2 in favor of the upsides. I’m a happy (addicted) camper. It made me stop playing Planet Puzzle League at least. At roughly the same time this game came out, I stumbled across another Picross game.

 

 

Lobstersoft’s Gemsweeper

First up, I’d love to include some kind of title screen or game logo here, but their product page doesn’t have one, just this screenshot and a picture of the game’s narrator.

Picross Games: Gemsweeper

Gemsweeper plays on your Windows PC, so it has a great big screen and doesn’t need any kind of zoom-in mode for larger puzzles. There is a typical casual-games “Quest mode” which, like in most casual games, progresses in difficulty way too slowly. You can play through 5 “temples” of 10 levels each and even though the puzzles get much larger, they aren’t much more difficult.

Pros:

  • Solid interface
  • Quick in/out play, much faster than most PC casual games
  • It’s Picross
  • $19.95 – 4 cents cheaper than Picross DS!

Cons:

  • Difficulty just isn’t there
  • The jokes the Professor/narrator character tells are really lame
  • No head-to-head online play feature

Two of the downsides aren’t really downsides as much as taste, so the score is 4 to 1 here in favor of the upsides.

The biggest problem with these two simultaneous Picross games appearing in my life is that I am not getting a lot of work done. If Xbox Live Arcade released one now, I think I’d be paralyzed.

 

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Kurt Koller Written by:

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