Grid Mania Switch Review

Exceling Battleship

Grid Mania is a puzzle game built around trial and error.  Playing like a 2D Rubik’s Cube, the goal is to move different colored balls on an Excel spreadsheet to their corresponding colored cell.  Moving balls from the right side of the screen will make them appear on the left side and the same goes for moving columns. The point is, you can’t just move one ball; the player must move an entire row or column. It is also pretty humorous that the first step in the opening tutorial is to touch the blue balls.

The puzzles in Grid Mania have one solution (although a puzzle could have several ways of reaching that solution).  In comparison, look at a puzzle game like Tetris, Dr. Mario, or any Puyo game.  Those puzzle games are different every time and built around endurance with multiplayer features.  Here, with Grid Mania, it is closer in comparison to something like Sudoku as the player simply must find the one answer to the specific puzzle.  This being said, Grid Mania is a much more difficult game and could cause frustration.

Grid Mania game

The face buttons actually move the balls in the direction of choice.

There are a total of four different modes with well over 150 puzzles to complete. Casual Puzzle is the easiest going mode, the main mode, as the player just needs to complete the puzzle regardless the number of moves it takes. Quick Challenge is the Casual mode only with a finite number of moves. Grid Madness requires the entire grid to be filled accordingly. The goal of Chain Reaction mode is to link balls of the same color together while still moving them to the corresponding location. Each mode is just a slightly different spin over the last but still offers enough variety for players to declare a favorite. Also, for the most dedicated players, randomly generated levels are also available.

The simple presentation justifies the low $3.99 price point. With little more than primary colors on a black grid, there is not much to see. The soundtrack is also chill but unvaried and does not loop smoothly.  But with such a low price point, these can’t be viewed as a complaint as they get the job done.

If you like to tease your brain with puzzles like Sudoku, then Grid Mania is a single player experience that can be enjoyed in short bursts.  The Switch is a good home for this puzzle game as players might only want to solve a couple puzzles on their lunch break or waiting for a train. Otherwise real time puzzle fans will want to hold off for a Switch version of Tetris.

Not As Good As: Chess
Also Try: learning a magic trick
Wait For It: Puzzle League on Switch

By: Zachary Gasiorowski, Editor in Chief myGamer.com
Twitter: @ZackGaz

Rating

Our Rating - 5.5

5.5

Total Score

A low cost puzzler for gamers who like to take it slow and think ahead.

User Rating: Be the first one !

Editor in Chief at myGamer.com | + posts

Editor in Chief - been writing for mygamer,com for 20+ years. Gaming enthusiast. Hater of pants. Publisher of obscure gaming content on my YT channel.

- Twitter @ZackGaz
- youtube.com/@ZackGaz
- Personal blog at: https://squallsnake.com/
- BuyMeACoffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/zackgaz
- Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/squallsnake
- Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/squallsnake7
- I am the EiC of: https://www.MyGamer.com/

One comment

1 Pings/Trackbacks for "Grid Mania Switch Review"
  1. […] releasing laughably bad Nintendo Switch games such as Astro Bears Party, Brawl, Mad Carnage , and Grid Mania. Pirates: All Aboard! continues the trend of poor quality and might even be their worst Switch game […]

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Featured Video

Featured Video

What happens when you link Metroid Prime with Fusion?