I Love Hue - color matching Description
I Love Hue is a visual puzzle game. It's the sort of thing that, if you're colour blind, you're not going to have even the slightest chance with. But if you're not, it's worth a look.
And looking is pretty much all it entails. There's no particular dextrous skill required here. You're just sliding blocks around a grid.
The twist comes from the colour of each block. You need to make a line of hues that connect two sides of the grid. And while things might start off sedate, it doesn't take long to sink its challenge claws deep.
The game starts you off with a group of colours. Then it shuffles some of them around. If there's a dot in the middle it's fixed, if not you can swipe them around.
The aim is to put everything back in the right order. And to start off with it's reasonably simple, because you've only got a handful of lines to concentrate on.
But then things get trickier. You've got intersections of hues to think about, and the colours you're swizzling get more alike.
You might not be testing your reactions, but there's still a level of tension here. And sometimes that can boil over into frustration. Which isn't exactly ideal.
Things get hard pretty darn quickly as well. But nothing really changes from puzzle to puzzle, just the shape of the grid that you're trying to rearrange.
And that means that, unless you really like colours, it's unlikely that this one is going to grab you in any meaningful way.
And looking is pretty much all it entails. There's no particular dextrous skill required here. You're just sliding blocks around a grid.
The twist comes from the colour of each block. You need to make a line of hues that connect two sides of the grid. And while things might start off sedate, it doesn't take long to sink its challenge claws deep.
The game starts you off with a group of colours. Then it shuffles some of them around. If there's a dot in the middle it's fixed, if not you can swipe them around.
The aim is to put everything back in the right order. And to start off with it's reasonably simple, because you've only got a handful of lines to concentrate on.
But then things get trickier. You've got intersections of hues to think about, and the colours you're swizzling get more alike.
You might not be testing your reactions, but there's still a level of tension here. And sometimes that can boil over into frustration. Which isn't exactly ideal.
Things get hard pretty darn quickly as well. But nothing really changes from puzzle to puzzle, just the shape of the grid that you're trying to rearrange.
And that means that, unless you really like colours, it's unlikely that this one is going to grab you in any meaningful way.
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