There’s a lot of plot to get through and we did find ourselves skipping it after a while although it is all voice acted which makes everything feel a bit more premium. It depends on how you feel about teen dramas with over the top characters. The cartoon style plot sections are also clear and cheerful which is good, although you may tire of the story long before it really goes anywhere. There’s nothing here to wow audiences and turn heads but the clean look works well. The game uses a similar presentation style to Puyo Puyo Tetris with a similar menu system and comparably clean and colourful presentation. So they’ve considered that you might try that rather than balancing things enough so that you don’t need to.Įverything else around the game is okay. The temptation ends up being to just circle through each colour and play them but an energy system is in place to stop you doing that (by basically limiting the number of moves you get). The core mechanic could be good but it just doesn’t suit being under pressure. For us it became a huge barrier to progression (although, oddly, act 5 was way easier). This is because this level really relies on scoring big (with combos) but this character acts fast enough to make reading the board in time almost impossible. For example, mission two of Act Four where a new character, a vampire, comes along and absolutely dominates. Also, there are some stages that are much harder than the ones that precede them. Unfortunately these make up far less of the campaign than the other variants. Other modes, such as the ones where you have limited moves but no time limit are much more enjoyable and balanced. But if you get larger matches early on, you’ll likely win. If you start with nothing but small matches available, you’ll burn too many moves and too much time early on. Also, each level is randomly generated and the board you get can definitely make the difference between success and failure. The basic idea of colour matching is fine but trying to count hexes to make sure you keep your combo is impossible especially when you are under time pressures. The core gameplay is okay but there are some issues and this all goes back to the fact that it just isn’t as intuitive as other puzzle games. The variation is good though as this could get a little bit dull if they didn’t mix things up. There are also modes where you fight on the same territory as opposed to having individual boards. You’ve also got modes where you have limited turns which makes things a bit trickier. mode against two or more AI characters which adds a time element to everything. But then you also have a number of variations on the core gameplay too. Firstly, there is a combo system where your score multiplier goes up as long as each colour pick converts a larger number of hexes than the turn before. The aim of the game is to turn the whole area one colour, which is fairly straightforward to understand. Further colour picks will then behave the same way but now with you having a larger territory of hexes for you to start from. You start in one corner and have to pick a colour which will make you take over any hexes of that colour as long as they are attached to your starting piece. Your play area is made up of a mixture of coloured hexes. That’s the case here as this is something different to what we’ve seen before (although it is heavily inspired by the 1991 PC puzzler 7 Colors), even though it feels kind of familiar at the same time. Of course, the worst thing about reviewing puzzle games is that you end up writing the instructions for the game and this is especially true when the game mechanics don’t fall into the usual Tetris, Puyo Puyo or match three style. But there’s also a fairly serious puzzle game going on here. On the one hand it’s a very silly story with over-the-top, almost anime-style reactions with a wide cast of characters, all with different motivations, mainly to do with wanting to kiss girls. This gives the game two sides to its personality. Indigo 7: Quest For Love is a puzzle game by Spanish studio Dolores Entertainment but one that offers both a fairly unusual puzzle gameplay mechanic and also a fairly sizeable story about musicians and love triangles all done in a cartoony style. Jin PS4 / Reviews tagged indigo 7 / music / puzzle game / puzzler / story / teen drama by Richie
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