Plan Ahead to Rise to the Top

6892 Comments
10
  • Type: Race, Timed
  • Difficulty: Difficult
  • Replay Value: So-So
  • Controls: Mouse
Object: Reach the 16th floor before your cursor runs out.

Review: This very basic line-drawn game has one of the most clever mechanisms I’ve ever seen in an online game. The game really presents a challenge to climb from floor one to floor sixteen using a single cursor to click on the stairs to rise to the next levels. The cursor only appears on the screen for about 60 seconds, however, so you have to move fast. Mostly you will just click on a stairway to advance up a level, but on certain floors you will have to find the stairway hidden inside boxes or will have to push a button to make the stairway appear.

You will not be able to complete this challenge on your first try. It IS impossible. But, that’s where you will discover the inventiveness this game puts into play. You get 10 cursors. With the first cursor, you just move up as fast as you can until you reach your first obstacle and you will eventually run out of time. When you start the course over with your second cursor, however, a ghost of your first cursor will play alongside you, doing exactly the same moves you did the first time around. So use your second cursor to race alongside the ghost of your first until you reach the obstacle where you got stuck. Then your previous cursors will assist you through the obstacle and onto the next obstacle.

This may sound a little complicated and the first time you play it will seem that way, but you will quickly discover how you must utilize each cursor in order to help yourself out the next time around. For example, on one floor you must find a stairwell hidden under a box in a room filled with boxes. With just one cursor, this will slow you down, but, when you have the previous cursor opening boxes alongside your current cursor, you will be able to locate the stairwell much faster. Later on, you will sacrifice your current cursor in order to push a button to make a hidden stairwell appear. Then use the next cursor to rise up the stairwell. Each time you start the race with a new cursor ALL of your previous cursors will do exactly what they did the first time you played them, so by the 8th or 9th cursor, you will have a screen full of busy cursors and it gets a little hectic to keep track of your current one.

If you make it to the 16th floor you win! It might take you a few full games to meet the challenge, but if you keep at it, you will eventually figure it out and win. Along the way, you will discover a whole new genre of gaming delight, which hopefully other designers will explore. The game has the feel of racing your ghost in console games like “Mario Kart”. This time however, you aren’t just trying to beat your previous time, but are actually using your ghost’s path to your benefit. So think ahead!






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See Your Reflex-ion in the Mirrors

6854 Comments
8
  • Type: Puzzler, Physics, Skill
  • Difficulty: Moderate to Difficult
  • Replay Value: Progressive
  • Controls: Mouse
Object: Guide the ball from start to end through a course of angled mirrors. Collect all coins along the way.

Review: This inventive puzzler looks similar to multitudes of other puzzle games out there, such as Orbox B or Cubeoban. The difference in this is that you aren’t simply pushing a cube around, but have a ball that bounces off of cleverly placed angled mirrors. The ball starts on the square marked with an ‘S’ and you must maneuver the mirrors so that the ball bounces through the course and collects all the blue coins and then exits the course on the square marked with an ‘E’. On most courses you can start the ball bouncing around and then manipulate the mirrors to guide it where you want to go. However, some levels require you to map out the course in advance because once the ball starts all mirrors get frozen in place.

Each mirror rotates in one of two settings and you can change the angle right before or after the ball hits it to get it to go in a new direction. Some silver colored mirrors are permanently fixed in place. However, each level features unique ways of utilizing the fixed mirrors. In some levels, the silver mirrors stay put altogether. In other levels, a button my auto rotate all the fixed mirrors or they might just rotate on their own at random intervals. To add to the puzzling mix, you will sometimes have other obstacles, such as blocks that move in certain directions when the ball hits them. Each level has a seemingly different strategy involved in solving it.

This puzzler features progressively more difficult levels and each level comes with a passcode so you don’t have to start over next time you play. I found the first 8 or 9 levels pretty easy to get through and then things get a little tougher. The game mechanics feel smooth and responsive and the puzzles aren’t so tough or frustrating that you will give up right away. In fact, they sort of make you want to keep going. Because the courses are contained with boundaries, you don’t have to worry about flying off the edge of the course or ‘dying’. The ball will sometimes get stuck in a holding pattern, but on most levels you can just keep flipping mirrors until you get the ball where you want it to go. On those few courses where your ball gets stuck in a permanent loop, you can always start over by clicking on the start square. This will reset the course to it’s original position.





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Golf All You Want Without Leaving the Office

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7
  • Type: Sports, Skill
  • Difficulty: Easy
  • Replay Value: Minimal
  • Controls: Mouse
Object: Sink your golf ball in the hole in the least amount of strokes possible.

Review: I’ve seen quite a few clever golf games online, but this one definitely has some extra appeal. This game of mini-golf includes 18 holes. You can play the front 9, the back 9 or all 18. The unique aspect of this game lies in the fact that the courses exist on the desktops of various office workers. The edges of the desk and various office supplies, such as pencils, envelopes and keyboards all provide the boundaries of each course. Cliboards and envelopes provide some ramps and spilt coffee and soda create a few water and sand traps. Additionally, various other objects, like cellphones and mice (computer mice and actual mice), move about each course creating moving obstacles.

The game allow up to four different players to compete and each player gets his own choice of initial ball placement before the first swing. The play mechanism feels very easy and intuitive to use–perhaps a bit too easy. Just click and drag the cursor back and an arrow will form. The longer the arrow, the harder the hit. Making par on most courses won’t give you too much trouble, although the pesky obstacles sometimes make you have to settle for 7 strokes or more on a course. Despite the fact that some levels may challenge you, the game plays very quickly. You can make it through all 18 holes in little over 10 minutes…so, no worn out feet or aching shoulders here.

Although the game doesn’t have all the bells and whistles of more indepth golf games (such as Tiger Woods or Super Monkey Ball Golf), it does provide an enjoyable atmosphere in which to kill a few minutes and it will certainly appeal to anyone who has ever gotten bored at the office and created a little course to distract themselves.





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