Elegant Puzzle Games Should Be On Oprah's Non-Existent List of Video Game "Favorite Things"

Date: Sat, 23 Sep 2023
Game: Splice
Splice Game Banner
Genre: Indie, Casual
Developer: Cipher Prime Studios
Release Date: Wed, 13 Jun 2012

Elegant Puzzle Games Should Be On Oprah's Non-Existent List of Video Game "Favorite Things"I don't know if Oprah Winfrey plays video games. For all I know she plays Angry Birds while commuting from her estate in California to her apartment in Chicago. Facebook games, at least, seem to be on her radar.



When I was playing Splice, an indie puzzle game born on Steam and now brought to the iPad, I couldn't help but let the game reaffirm how much I love puzzles. And how much I appreciate elegant UI and subtle, soft music. It's probably one of my favorite things. So it stands to reason it should be on the most official list of favorite things I know of: Oprah's.


Splice is all these things. It's also a pretty complicated puzzle game.


You enter a micro-organism of sorts, and splice and mutate the microbes to form a cohesive part. Successfully pulling this off requires a certain level of understanding of the entire structure of the microbe, as well as the parts that form it.






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Dragging stems of microbes off to be placed in empty placeholders grows to be increasingly difficult. You'll have to splice off legs of the micro-organism in a certain number of strokes to complete each level.


It's a simple game. It starts off easy enough, letting you learn the nature of how splicing works and when it doesn't. It's not fast-paced or actiony. It's calm and even soothing. I feel like I've given my brain a good work out by the end of a set of levels. And, really, we should all keep our brains active. So why not do so with an elegant video game?


Splice <$3.99, iTunes>


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