Rooms: The Main Building review

Bland title and premise turn into surprisingly compelling puzzling

12DOVE Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Makes tile-slide puzzles compulsive and fun

  • +

    An interestingly quirky art style

  • +

    Tunes start catchy

  • +

    and the sound effects are good

Cons

  • -

    A bit gloomy at times

  • -

    Music soon becomes irritating

  • -

    Can get repetitive

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.

On paper, Rooms: The Main Building sounds about as much fun as a three-hour slideshow entitled ‘Artex – Swirly Ceilings through the Ages’. That’s because it’s based on those godawful tile-sliding puzzles where you have to rearrange a picture. However, Rooms manages to rise above its inauspicious roots to offer some fairly sophisticated DS puzzling.

Cast as Mr. X, you’re flung into a peculiar steampunky city that’s a bit New York, a bit London. For reasons not made totally clear, the only way home is to find golden jigsaw pieces, achieved by navigating through dozens of tile-slide puzzles (the titular ‘rooms’) and a handful of point ’n’ click segments (to call them puzzles would be generous, as they’re painfully easy).

The neat twist on the well-worn tile-sliding mechanic is that although you can only move the square you’re standing in, and can’t always walk between adjacent tiles, you can warp between them using wardrobes, phones orsubway trains. Similarly, items such as keys and candles grant access to blocked tiles, while pumps evacuate flooded squares. For a further challenge, you’re awarded gold status for a room by making sure the image in the tiles’ background is correctly aligned when you get to the exit.

The game has a great learning curve, throwing in new elements at just the right time (though the hint system is pretty useless if you do get stuck). And while there are only a hundred puzzles, completists will want to chase gold status on all the levels. Whether through design or the restrictions of the DS screen, some rooms must be scrolled through as they disappear off the page, which isn’t massively user-friendly, but on a superficial level this is a nice-looking game. Mr. X reminds us of the rotoscoped original Prince of Persia, and there’s a fair bit of detail in the levels even if they do all look very similar.

Hardened puzzle fans could probably rattle through this in an afternoon or two, but it’s worth trying out because it’s such a fresh take on a stale idea. It’s also a game that’s perfectly suited to portable, touchscreen gaming. You should consider making room for Rooms in your DS.

Apr 5, 2010

More info

GenreAdventure
DescriptionIt may seem like a straightforward tile-sliding puzzle game, but an emphasis on story and the ability to create your own levels might just keep this one interesting enough to recommend.
Platform"DS","Wii"
US censor rating"Everyone","Everyone"
UK censor rating"Rating Pending","Rating Pending"
Release date1 January 1970 (US), 1 January 1970 (UK)
More
CATEGORIES
Latest in Adventure
Minecraft Diamond Armor
Minecraft Pocket Edition got its name because one of its devs was a big "Nintendo nerd" who wanted to pay homage to the Game Boy Pocket
an ai chatbot plays a modded verion of pokemon red and jumps down a ledge to talk to an npc
An AI's mission to 'teach' itself Pokemon Red is going as well as you think - after escaping Cerulean City after tens of hours, it went right on back
Pokemon Legends Z-A screenshot showing Mega Charizard
Pokemon Legends Z-A's visuals aren't "great" say former Nintendo marketing leads, but hope Switch 2 could allow Game Freak to "go back to the drawing board" and add more detail to future RPGs
Screenshot of Herdling, showing the weird yaks heading toward a sunset horizon.
With 18,000 glowing Steam reviews on their lovely debut game, this indie team's game about leading cute fantasy yaks up a mountain is instantly one to watch
The two characters in Split Fiction holding their hands up in surrender in a futuristic city
Split Fiction, the new game from the It Takes Two devs, launches to Overwhelmingly Positive reviews on Steam and is the highest rated game on Metacritic this year
Exploring and fighting in Blades of Fire
Blades of Fire plays like a lost Xbox 360-era mashup between God of War and Soulslikes, and it's coming from the studio behind Metroid Dread
Latest in Reviews
Lenovo Legion Go S with FlyKnight gameplay on screen featuring player character holding bow and arrow with enemy ant in backdrop.
Lenovo Legion Go S Windows 11 review: “my heart aches for this mixed up handheld”
Talisman 5th Edition game components
Talisman 5th Edition review: "The characterful imperfections of the original game remain clear to see "
WWE 2K25
WWE 2K25 review: "A colossal package even if you never go anywhere near Virtual Currency"
Altered: Trial by Frost booster box and packs on a playmat
Altered: Trial by Frost review - "Satisfying enough to offer highly varied gameplay"
Three SteelSeries QcK Performance mouse pads on a wooden desk
I didn't expect to prefer a coarser mouse pad, but SteelSeries' new QcK Performance range has changed my mind
Boro and Alta sit on a bench together in Wanderstop
Wanderstop review: "Exalting the transformative power of tea"