Pretty neat little puzzle game. I'm not too familiar with something like Minesweeper which this game likely takes inspiration from but I feel it's a fun take of the style. The mechanics of counting around certain cells to pick out which ones to break or fill in are pretty engaging and get pretty satisfying nailing the solutions here, especially on some of the later stages. I don't think I'm entirely keen on the mistake counter mechanic though. It's kind of annoying to have to redo the whole stage you're on if you make an error in your judgement and turns some of the harder stages from a rather relaxed experience into a more anxious experience. Ah well, I guess there has to be some method of punishing people who just press everything to rush through.

Hyper Hexagoner is honestly one of the most fun stages I've ever played in a game and I wish I could continuously play it without it switching over to Hyper Hexagonest 2 minutes in.

I mean, the title doesn't lie, it's a fun racer game. Not sure if it might be a bit odd how I ended up enjoying this spin-off more than the original game. The more condensed and run-based format of this does the timer gimmick better in my opinion, than it's main title where it sometimes came off as intrusive at times there. Some goals are rather annoying like finishing in under 60 seconds which basically requires you to get lucky with trash can combo boosts. But if you just want a short and fun time, you can't go wrong here. Plus it's profits are for a good cause which is nice.

The first Hexcells was a nice little puzzle game, and this game is basically just more of that but amped up a ton. However, it's amped up to the point that I actually really didn't enjoy this one in comparison to the first. I feel that the mechanics they introduced here are just too complicated for my liking, especially ones like certain cells just flat out not telling you how many blue cells are next to them. (Like, thanks game, that's real helpful.) All the mechanics can also combine together so wildly in the later stages that it gets really hard to even find out where to start them. And it doesn't help that said later stages are almost always long and complex as hell, so they take an extensively long time to solve as well. And it also doesn't help that because of the extreme length and complexity of those stages, the mistake counter mechanic is especially punishing here. Having to redo a rather lengthy puzzle for completion if you made an error here or there is really frustrating. I just wish that this game didn't go to the extent that it did since the first game was pretty cool in my eyes, but here I really just didn't wanna bother.

I didn't really need to play this for long to find out that I'm not a fan of Columns

This is a pretty short and sweet experience with a good amount of charm to it as well. It's probably not really my thing but I guess puzzle games in general aren't really my thing, especially slide-type puzzle games. I still found this mostly enjoyable regardless of that. If you are a fan of puzzle games like these or the 2D Zelda games which this feels inspired from you'll probably enjoy this more. As it stands though, I found it to be just a neat little romp. My main gripe however comes with replays of the game making the dialogue, while charming initially, rather annoying as there's no way to skip it, which is especially bad if you're trying to go for the sub 15 minute run achievement since you have to mash through it all every attempt, so that's one thing to bear in mind.

I feel like this game's main objective is just to annoy you as much as possible.
Well, it did a good job on that at least.

My god, the way the Big Arms remix was treated here is some of the most disheartening shit I've ever seen

I'm not sure if it would be an awkward shot to take to call some random cheaply made puzzle game I found off of Steam one day but something about this is just so uniquely... dire... and draining. Still not quite sure how to put it but something like that is about the closest way to convey just how struggling to bear through this made me feel. Just about only 10 levels in is when I reached my initial breaking point and wanted the whole thing to be over with. From all the of the boring and scuffed aesthetics to the gross oversight of a permanently locked fullscreen mode, the only thing helping my drive to continue onward was my desire to have just one more 100% completion under my belt. Now I'm really not quite the type of person to be keen on puzzle games in general, but I can recognize when something is just unpleasant to sit through.

Seriously, you couldn't have even be bothered to have an undo button and thus forcing me to restart an entire goddamn level every time I get roadblocked by a mistake or misinput, but you have the absolute audacity to ask me to speedrun these levels after that fact??? What the hell???

Hylics is the kind of game that just needs to be seen to be believed. It's so surreal to the point that not much here really makes sense, and it's honestly kinda rad. It's hyper-psychadelic claymation style is super unique and cool to look at, coupled with it's absurd plot, humor, and alot of dialogue being random strings of words combines into this extremely chaotic mess of what I can only refer to as the best kind of nonsense. Even if it has some shortcomings like some of the combat being rather annoying at times (please for the love of god learn the mystic meat ability as soon as possible or certain enemies WILL constantly blind you into oblivion), it's still one hell of a trip to experience.

The original Mario Bros. is honestly not very good. My main problem here is that the movement feels way too stiff and slippery at the same time. It's to the point that it's a struggle to get around the map and stun enemies to defeat them. (And those ice enemies can take advantage of your movement struggles to make platforms even harder to move on, which is real nice) The gameplay loop would be much more enjoyable if it wasn't so hard trying to maneuver yourself around. It also doesn't help that a much better version of this is included in all of the Super Mario Advance games as well as one of my favorite games of all time, Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga. You're much better off playing that version on one of those games. (I couldn't imagine paying money for a sort of Virtual Console release of this when that version exists)

This was a pretty neat experience I'd say. It's a sort of lighthearted environmental puzzle game about dropping things into holes. Plus it's story is fittingly goofy for it's gameplay loop and honestly pretty endearing. It's not a very long game at all, but it's probably better as something short and sweet. It's overall gameplay and feel is pretty simple so it's probably better being short so that it doesn't overstay it's welcome. I know some people out there aren't going to enjoy aspects like this game's humor but oh well, I have a soft spot for it I guess.

Please help, my irony poisoned playfulness towards bad games like these has gone much too far. I have elaborately gaslit my own mind into thinking this game is the funniest shit of all time. It's downright intrusive at this point. Whenever my mind is at a blank on something it just instantly and automatically defaults to Sonic Forces as an answer. This game has become my own personal Among Us. Oh dear god, it's all Sonic Forces. Everything is Sonic Forces.

(it's still pretty fucked up how you have have to experience grind for completion here though)

This game's pretty funny, it's like a short and sweet stream of shenanigans. I particularly like the stuff that goes on with these dumb guards. Seriously who's hiring these guys, they can't even comprehend someone going up or down a flight of stairs

I'm probably never going to get over the fact that there was a bug that cheesed the entire game and I only found out about it after completing it legitimately