![]() These levels, despite and possibly because of their brevity, make me want more of Color Zen. With such short, relatively easy levels-ranging from a few seconds to a few minutes for a true challenge-the 120 currently available will need to be savored slowly to make the experience last. Unfortunately, it does reduce replay value as there’s little incentive to retry levels for faster or error-free completion. As a high-stress, easily flustered gamer, I personally prefer this approach. The Zen aspect of Color Zen comes from both this beauty and its lack of a timer, score-keeping, or anything else that might encourage highly concentrated play. While playing, I often felt like Tom Haverford discovering abstract art for the first time: “Each shape is its own thing, but then when it comes together, it really gives you a sense of…completion.” The colors chosen are also deliberate beyond solving the level, resulting in beautiful compositions of cool blues and grays or bright reds and yellows. Although shapes have no bearing on gameplay-circles, squares, and triangles interact with each other equally-they are used to create eloquent designs that double as your game board. These mosaics are one of the shining stars of the experience, providing almost distractingly beautiful layouts at the beginning of each level. There is the occasional stumper-a level with all black and white shapes tripped me up for a few minutes-but often, it’s much easier to over-think what needs to be done than to actually fail to do it, primarily because of the elaborate mosaics created by the many starter shapes. Many challenges break down to a numbers game and an ability to count backward from the border’s end goal: if you need to end on red but only have one red square, it’s a matter of ensuring that red square is left to last (along with something white). Once past these beginner levels, Color Zen‘s puzzles are innovative and engaging, yet still not especially difficult. While this creates a great variety of mechanics as you progress, it unfortunately wastes the first five levels of each stage on very basic, tutorial-esque challenges that require little thought. Only pulsating shapes can be moved white shapes become whatever color touches them and black shapes erase whatever shape they touch, along with themselves.Įach of the six, 20-level stages in Color Zen introduces one of these concepts at its start, from white shapes to “shields” that can prevent a shape from dissolving into a same-colored background. Shapes that are inscribed within other shapes are safe from this, but can only be accessed by clearing the outer shapes first. Any free-floating shapes that are the same color as a newly painted background will be lost to the background. While this concept starts off slowly, asking you to slide a pink ball into a pink square to match the goal of a pink border, the challenge ramps up quickly.Īs the stages progress, a lot of small yet significant details begin to come into play. The screen will change every time two same-colored shapes collide, which causes the shapes to explode and paint the background whatever color they were. Your goal in Color Zen is, not surprisingly, quite simple: change the color of your screen to match the color of the level’s border. Although not a genre definer alone, Color Zen is a worthy addition to their shapely ranks. As the ultimate renditions of pick-up-and-play, entries like Hundreds, Mosaique, and Blendokuhave dropped shiny gems and cutesy creatures for the sake of simplified, streamlined, and perfected puzzle mechanics. There’s a growing tendency towards abstract, single-serving gameplay that is beginning to define the casual gaming space. Hey Color Zen Fans! Have issues fixing a stage? Questions about the newest update? Something look off to you? Check out our FAQ web page here for attainable solutions or to let us know about it: įor optimum performance and stability be positive to replace your Android operating system to the newest available version.One square, two square, red square…red square. Color Zen features audio by our friend Steve Woodzell. Please strive Color Zen, share it with your pals and beloved ones, and ship us some suggestions: ![]() ![]() This sport has been a labor of love for us and is designed to be color blind friendly. Just a easy set of rules, intuitive controls, and satisfying puzzles. One that invites you to put on your headphones, loosen up, and find your method through an abstract world of colours and shapes. Color Zen is a new sort of puzzle sport for phones and tablets. ![]()
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