About This Game Play with squishy clusters of soap bubbles in this mesmerizing new puzzle game. Inflate, mix, match, pop, and win with hundreds of super fun goals to complete. Using a proprietary Molecular Dynamics Engine, the game's physics plays like no other game. Color-blind option available.INNOVATIVE NEW GAMEPLAYFill bubbles with colorful air and push nearby bubbles around using the playful physics of real bubbles! Break edges between bubbles to mix new colors and create matches of 4 or more. Plan your strategy from a tetris-style queue to build up cascading chain reactions and longer matches for dazzling bonuses and wilds.HOURS OF AMAZING CONTENTExperience unique surprises down every path! Each of the over 170 handmade puzzles requires new thinking and twisting strategies with ever increasing challenges. Play in 3 different game modes: PUZZLES, ARCADE, and INFINITY. Try to beat 35 bubbly achievements that will test your mastery.RELAXING AND ATMOSPHERICRelaxing ambient music gracefully integrates with the satisfying sounds of popping bubbles. Put on a pair of headphones and experience a new level of flow and mindfulness. Helpful hints are available if you get stuck.LIFE-LIKE SOAP BUBBLE PHYSICSFrom the vision of artist/coder/designer Stu Denman and inspired by the work of his MIT scientist grandfather, the game brings the beauty of nature to your screen. Incredibly fluid “molecular dynamics engine” animates hundreds of bubbles at 60 FPS.CHARMING CREATURESHelp tiny aquatic creatures that are trapped in the bubbles. Avoid greedy jelly crabs and spiky urchins. Love him or hate him, a curious fish named Bloop will surely reveal your nature as an optimist or a pessimist.COLOR-BLIND MODEFeaturing an innovative color-blind mode that provides an authentic and accessible game experience without intrusive icons or patterns. 7aa9394dea Title: Tiny BubblesGenre: Casual, Indie, Simulation, StrategyDeveloper:Pine Street Codeworks LLCPublisher:Pine Street Codeworks LLCRelease Date: 8 May, 2018 Tiny Bubbles Key Serial Number I really want to give this game a "meh", but overall this balances out to a positive review.The visuals and overall feel of the game provide a nice calm experience in puzzle mode, which is nice. I really didn't like the arcade mode which felt too frantic and I couldn't really get in the right rhythm.The puzzle part was pretty good, with some novel mechanics. There aren't obvious hard rules on exactly how the bubble move and behave as they grow and pop, but your intuition generally works. Some time is doesn't and I find myself frustrated with trying to figure what order or popping the bubbles will it collapse correctly, and there are times you have to time in even in puzzle mode, letting some bubble pop and then filling more before it is done. But those frustrations are the exception.I'm only maybe half way through so far, but I'm not deeply impressed with the complexity or difficulty of the puzzles. I've not spent more than a couple minutes on any one puzzle and most take < 30 seconds.Overall, a nice game and worth the low price. I see this game is currently in beta on mobile, but I sort of suspect this game will be better as a mobile game. Probably a bit cheaper, but the mechanics should translate well the touch interface should work well for this game.. Tiny Bubbles is a world class casual puzzle game. It's a joy to play each moment because the physics are so robust, and it still manages to be a genuine challenge. I love how the mechanics are loose enough to where you straight up have to quickly finesse the physics sometimes to beat the level, or you can take your time and megamind it. Add the "Nick's Praise Award" to your giant award cabinet.. Very pretty; simple but compelling mechanics. Nice little puzzle game.. A sublime physics-based puzzle game that pushes you to think outside the bubble! Delightfully intuitive, yet wonderfully deep. Some levels test your reaction and resolve, while others let you contemplate before making that perfect, satisfying pop. The difficulty is well-balanced too. Even my wife (who isn't usually into puzzle games) joined in and eventually solved some of the tougher, imaginative challenges. Solid recommendation!. Very nicely done puzzle game :-). Well worth the money, a great matching game with interesting mechanics and impressive visuals.. Tiny Bubbles is sort of physics based match four puzzle with some complexity thrown in. What's special compared to other similar games is that the bubbles have bubble physics modelling. Bubbles are attracted to each other, so popping one in the middle means that other bubbles will fill its place. Especially the first area is trivial and functions as a tutorial about the available tools and diffent variants of the level goals. Difficulty rises gradually, so levels that can be complished under a minute get further and further apart.Level progression does have multiple paths, so there's no need to try same level over and over again (paths eventually lead to same place though). Choices don't get overwhelming as most of the levels are locked until path to them is opened when previous levels along the path are completed. Game also subtly suggests a level, so pondering what level to choose is not necessary.Levels are relatively varied. After few areas there's no new gameplay mechanics as such (I haven't played all the levels yet though), but due the fact that there are several game modes and levels have varied goals, using same strategy over and over again doesn't (usually) work. Game does require relatively quick reactions, especially on the arcade type levels. The thing is that bubbles don't pop immediately and by acting quickly it's possible to make match much more than the original four or five bubbles with the same colour. Levels can be quite often completed quicker by doing moves while bubbles are still settling from the previous move.Graphics, music and sound effects are nice. Especially if there's a sale, I can recommend buying Tiny Bubbles. Though based on the amount of entertainment and polish, current price is not too much. Games that are this addictive are not that common.
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