''Puzzlejuice'' is a 2012
indie puzzle video game for
iOS produced and developed by video game company Sirvo. The game is a combination of ''
Tetris'',
tile-matching, and
Boggle: players rearrange falling
tetromino blocks into rows of similar colors, which turn into letters that are cleared from the board by forming words. The fast-paced game also includes challenges and
power-up
In video games, a power-up is an object that adds temporary benefits or extra abilities to the player character as a Game mechanics, game mechanic. This is in contrast to an Item (game), item, which may or may not have a permanent benefit that ca ...
s. The development team consisted of three people; programmer
Asher Vollmer initially developed the game alone, before reaching out to artist
Greg Wohlwend for advice on the aesthetics. Composer
Jimmy Hinson produced the game's music.
The game was released January 19, 2012 to what video game review score aggregator
Metacritic
Metacritic is an American website that aggregates reviews of films, television shows, music albums, video games, and formerly books. For each product, the scores from each review are averaged (a weighted average). Metacritic was created ...
called "generally favorable" reviews. Multiple reviewers mentioned the difficulty involved in juggling the three game components simultaneously. The game was released on Android through publisher
GameClub on June 19, 2020.
Gameplay

In ''Puzzlejuice'', the player turns falling
tetrominos into letters, and those letters into words and points. The player taps and drags on the
touchscreen
A touchscreen (or touch screen) is a type of electronic visual display, display that can detect touch input from a user. It consists of both an input device (a touch panel) and an output device (a visual display). The touch panel is typically l ...
to rotate and position multicolored tetrominos that fall from the top of the screen. When the player completes a solid row of tiles, or arranges the fallen blocks such that four or more like-colored tiles touch, the color tiles turn into letters. Players connect these letter tiles with their eight adjacent tiles (in
ordinal directions) to make words. Words of sufficient length are cleared from play as well as their adjacent tilesthus longer words clear more blocks. The
iPhone version shows a magnified version of the tile obscured by the player's finger near the finger. The game has been compared to a cross between
Boggle, ''
Tetris'', and
tile-matching.
The game also offers objectives to be accomplished over multiple sessions, like making a six-letter word, or clearing three or more rows at once. This unlocks
power-up
In video games, a power-up is an object that adds temporary benefits or extra abilities to the player character as a Game mechanics, game mechanic. This is in contrast to an Item (game), item, which may or may not have a permanent benefit that ca ...
s that occasionally provide opportunities such as halting the rate of new tetromino drops, and removing blocks from the screen. Up to three power-ups can be selected to be used in each game.
The object of the game is to get the
highest score. There are two play modes: Zen and Core. There is a 90-second time limit in Zen mode. In Core mode, players play until the screen fills with poorly placed tetrominos, similar to
Tetris. Core has two difficulties. On the easiest difficulty, three-letter words suffice, but harder modes require five-letter words at a minimum. A
score multiplier grows as players maintain a
combo of multiple words created in succession, and resets if players are too slow. Scores are uploaded to
Game Center.
Development
''Puzzlejuice'' was built by a group called Collaboratory and later renamed Sirvo. The three-person team consisted of programmer
Asher Vollmer, artist
Greg Wohlwend, and composer
Jimmy Hinson. The game began as Vollmer's idea. He later reached out to Wohlwend for aesthetic advice, which resulted in a 365-message chain email and the final product. Wohlwend and Vollmer did not speak a word to each otheror use a medium outside of Gmail and Twitterthroughout the entire development process. The title was inspired by what Vollmer described as the "EXTREME" American culture of the 1990s, exemplified by the board game ''
Crossfire'' and juice-filled
Gushers fruit snacks. A similar game, ''
Spelltower'', was released during ''Puzzlejuice''s development, but Vollmer and Wohlwend ultimately considered their game sufficiently different to proceed. ''Puzzlejuice'' was selected for the
PAX 10, a spotlighted group of indie games, in July 2012. The game was released as a universal app for iPhone and
iPad on January 19, 2012. Vollmer expressed an interest in bringing the game to
Steam Greenlight in August 2012.
Reception
The game received "generally favorable" reviews, according to video game review score aggregator
Metacritic
Metacritic is an American website that aggregates reviews of films, television shows, music albums, video games, and formerly books. For each product, the scores from each review are averaged (a weighted average). Metacritic was created ...
. Multiple reviewers compared its core mechanics to a combination of Boggle, ''Tetris'', and a tile-matching game, such as ''
Bejeweled'' or ''
Puyo Puyo''. Comparing word games, ''Edge'' called it the "fast-paced action-adventure" to ''Spelltower'' "survival horror". Multiple reviewers mentioned the difficulty in mentally balancing the various components of the game, which ''VideoGamer.com'' compared to "doing
open heart surgery while playing ''
Dance Dance Revolution''.
''Edge'' suggested playing on the game's hardest difficulty, which they found the most engaging. They called it "mayhem, ... elegantly handled". ''Pocket Gamer'' Harry Slater said the game "forces your brain to think in ways that it's never been asked to before". ''Edge'' compared the game's challenges to ''
Jetpack Joyride'' missions, and complimented the connection between Vollmer's "magpie" design and Wohlwend's "luminously flat pastel-colored art". Phil Eaves of ''Slide to Play'' wrote that the player should play with headphones or else miss a "wonderful"
chiptune soundtrack.
''Edge'' called the game "too hectic and exhausting" to return to often. ''VideoGamer.com'' Mark Brown struggled with registering the right input on the small screen, and found himself inadvertently making words from letters instead of moving color blocks. ''Slide to Play'' Eaves was also troubled by the controls, and recommended the iPad version for the extra screen space. ''Pocket Gamer'' Slater said it was too easy to clear the board with three-letter words, and thus that the design execution was not as robust as the concept, never being "more than the sum of its strange combination of parts". While ''TouchArcade'' Troy Woodfield called the gameplay "not ... totally original" in how it combines three common game ideas, he still found the combination "a stroke of genius", and highly recommended the game as "a breath of fresh air". Brown of ''VideoGamer.com'' agreed that ''Puzzlejuice'' distinguished itself from the crowded iOS puzzle game genre, and ''Slide to Play'' Eaves called its balance between game types "perfect".
References
External links
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{{good article
Indie games
IOS games
GameClub games
Puzzle video games
Single-player video games
Video games developed in the United States
2012 video games