Spot the Designer in the Crowd

7091 Comments
7
  • Type: Search
  • Difficulty: Medium
  • Replay Value: Pretty Good
  • Controls: Mouse
Object: Find the selected designer in the crowd in the time allotted.

Review: If you’ve ever enjoyed the “Where’s Waldo?” Books or any other children’s book where you have to locate a specific object in a scene of several hundred objects, you will enjoy this game. The designers of this game put themselves into it as tiny little pixel art characters.

The screen has at least a hundred little characters standing around. You must move a huge technological arrow (that looks like a big computer chip) around the crowd, trying to pinpoint the one designer indicated at the bottom of the screen. All the other people will skirt and side step from underneath the arrow because they all apparently avoid technology. The lone designer will stay put. But this lack of movement doesn’t always make them any easier to spot. Often times the designer you seek will stand behind a group of people and make themselves quite undetectable.

Sometimes you can spot them right off the bat. But, this usually happens out of luck or the fact that they have a distinctive color shirt on. Other times, you will spend quite a long time milling through the crowd looking for that one person who doesn’t wander away from you. If you find the designer within the time limit allowed (which seems rather short), you advance to a new level. But, if you click on the wrong area or run out of time, you have to go back to level one. Luckily the game will allow you to continue searching for the designer even if the timer runs out. The levels don’t really increase in difficulty and often you will have to find the same designer several times in a row. If you have the eagle eye to make it to level 20, you will get rewarded with “God Like” status.

The game doesn’t have too much variety, so most players will tire of it pretty quickly. However, it definitely has the same appeal as a ball of string might have to a cat…irresistible to play with, but won’t capture the attention for too long.





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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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Clear Your Mind and Solve

1 Comment
5
  • Type: Jigsaw Puzzle
  • Difficulty: Progressive
  • Replay Value: Good
  • Controls: Mouse
Object: Solve each jigsaw which consists of no image and just white pieces.

Review: You will either love this game or hate it. There are hundreds of different online jigsaw puzzles and this one doesn’t have much to offer the genre other than the challenge of putting together progressively harder jigsaw puzzles which are completely blank. The first puzzle consists of about 12 pieces and it super easy to complete, with each new puzzle the board stays the same size, but the number of pieces increases and the size of the pieces decreases.

As you get to the 10 x 12 puzzles or higher, it becomes harder and harder to see when pieces line up correctly. So you may have to try pieces in different places to finally complete the puzzle. Some people on the comment board for this game obviously find the task tedious, boring or a strain on their eyes. Others find it a fascinating time-killer. I think the game has a definite appeal for those who like to solve jigsaw puzzles just to solve them and who aren’t mainly concerned with completing a final image.

Each jigsaw game online features different mechanics. This one doesn’t rotate any pieces, so the puzzles will always orient the pieces in the correct direction. You can arrange and stack the pieces outside of the solving area, but all pieces start out laid out in a grid, so you can easily see all of them. Additionally, any piece will automatically snap into place on the board even if it doesn’t fit with the adjacent piece. This makes it a bit more difficult to solve the puzzles, as you may assume two pieces fit together when they actually don’t. Most of the time you can tell when pieces don’t quite line up because of the gaps and thicker edge lines. However on the smaller puzzles, you might have to really squint your eyes to figure out which pieces don’t match. Finally, one disappointing aspect of the game lies in the fact that you can’t move completed sections as a unit, so you have to painstakingly move each piece one at a time to adjust a section.

I docked this game points mostly because the majority of players won’t have much patience to continue with this game past the first few levels. But, I enjoyed playing through it for a while. The game offers enough of a challenge and seemingly doesn’t have an end to the number of levels it includes. Eventually the pieces will get so small you can no longer solve it. Luckily, the game will save your progress as long as you always play in the same browser, so when you’ve had your fill, you will be able to pick up later where you left off.





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