Picross DS [import] review

Brain still need training? Try this block party

12DOVE Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Brilliant puzzle solving

  • +

    Incredibly satisfying

  • +

    Gets the ol' noodle cooking

Cons

  • -

    Sometimes a bit too tough

  • -

    Audio gets incredibly repetitive

  • -

    Graphics won't amaze or even impress

Why you can trust 12DOVE Our experts review games, movies and tech over countless hours, so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about our reviews policy.

Forget Sudoku. Kakuro: get your koat. Picross is the logic-based mind-meddler of champions. It's well established in Japan - having been invented by a woman flicking a skyscraper's lights on and off, believe it or not. Now the infection's spread to DS.

It works like PC timewaster Minesweeper with the randomness taken out. Starting out with a totally blank grid, you chisel out squares with your stylus, according to the numbers at the edges. So: seeing "3" and "7" at the top of a column means that, somewhere in that column, there's a line of three squares and a line of seven - in that order. The only question is: where?

Sudoku-heads used to just cross-referencing rows and columns had better upgrade their brain batteries now. Picross has no clues (unless you choose to autofill a single row and column at the start - wimp), so you really have to tease out the pattern, using knowledge of where squares definitely (and definitely cannot) lie. It's intoxicatingly logical and hard work. Imagine slowly illuminating a lightbulb with concentrated thought and you'll get a feel for how satisfying it is to watch the grid gradually fill up - blossom, really - as your beleaguered brain spots the rules and patterns. And - bonus - you've completed a nice picture of, say, a yawning hippo at the end of it all.

More info

GenrePuzzle
DescriptionAmazingly satisfying puzzles and brain-twisting logical gameplay will have you uncovering hidden pics for a long time.
Platform"DS"
US censor rating"Everyone"
UK censor rating""
Release date1 January 1970 (US), 1 January 1970 (UK)
More
CATEGORIES