Tune In: 

Back on air soon!


Our live radio broadcasts are currently on hiatus while we work on improvements to Sanitarium.FM's core services. For further information, visit our Discord.

 Your Sanitarium.FM Account 


Today
  • 9pm - Auto DJ

Tomorrow
  • 12am - Auto DJ
  • 3am - Auto DJ
  • 6am - Auto DJ
  • 9am - Auto DJ



 Support The Sanitarium.FM! 

Become a Patron!
Or donate to us via PayPal:





Sanitarium.FM, how long have you wasted reading all these?
Sanitarium.FM Site Search:  
Or click here to search the Forum.
Indie Game First Looks: Glitchspace and Hexcells Infinite

This week I selected 2 random games from my library to take a look at. They are the first person programming game Glitchspace, and the logic, puzzle game Hexcells Infinite.

 

Glitchspace

 

2014-10-01_00003

 

Summary

 

Glitchspace is a is a first person programming game that’s centered around a visual programming mechanic. You find yourself in a cyberspace world in search of the Glitchspace, a part of cyberspace filled with glitches in the system that can be exploited. As you travel, you find yourself reprograming certain parts of the world around you to help you on your way.

 

When you come across a programmable object in game you are able to bring up a canvas that contains the info of the object though symbols called nodes. You can delete or add nodes to the canvas and connect them together to edit the object. Depending on what you add to the canvas you can: apply a force to an object, moving it out of the way; scale an object down to make it the correct height for jumping on; duplicate and move an object to create stairs, or floating platforms; make an object have no collisions to pass through it; change the physical properties of an object; make an object move when you touch another object; as well as many other things.

 

This game is still currently in Alpha so they are adding more and more to it. At the moment they only have a short story mode which is basically a tutorial. When you finish that the game unlocks sandbox mode which allows you to mess around with the mechanics how you like. They also recently added Oculus Rift support to the game so it may be interesting to see where that goes.

 

My Thoughts

 

I did not know what to think of this title when I got it. It had an interesting concept I haven’t really seen before and it got me curious. Of what I played of it, it didn’t disappoint. I don’t have much knowledge about programing, but this game, with its visual mechanic, made me feel like I was actually accomplishing something. It makes you think logically about what needs to be done and the current “story mode” helps you learn everything pretty well.

 

I personally can’t wait to see where this game goes in the future and I hope that they add more content to the game including more of a story hopefully. While I did enjoy the game, it is still in Alpha and unless you are desperate to try it now, I would definitely wait for it to be finished or wait for a good sale. With the Early Access you never know what will come of the game later on.

 

You can purchase it on Steam here.

 

 

 

Hexcells Infinite

 

2014-10-16_00001

 

Summary

 

Hexcells Infinite is a logic, puzzle game much like Minesweeper, but more complex. In this game you need to find all the highlighted blue cells in each puzzle and try not to make too many mistakes. There are a few ways to figure out where they are at. One is that some of the non-blue cells will have a number on them saying how many blue cells are touching them from 0-6. Some of the blue cells have numbers on them as well, but these numbers indicate how many other blue cells are in a designated area around them. Some puzzles also have numbers along the outside of the puzzle area saying how many blue cells are in a particular column, row, or diagonal. You will have to use all these clues to complete the puzzle. You should be able to figure out, logically where the cells are with making as few mistakes as possible.

 

The main campaign consists of 36 challenging puzzles, each getting harder as you go along. The game also has a random puzzle generator which uses random seeds that can be shared, or it can make puzzles based on the current date. This mechanic can be used to create more and more puzzles, almost giving you an “infinite” supply.

 

My Thoughts

 

I do like to play a nice casual puzzle game every once in a while to calm down. Currently this game has become one of my favorites to play while listening to music or podcasts. It has a nice relaxing atmosphere to it and is also challenging.

 

I think this is defiantly a must buy for anyone who likes games like Minesweeper, or Logic/Puzzle games in general. And with the fact that you can have practically infinite amounts of puzzles to work on, it is defiantly worth the cheap price tag.

 

You can buy it on Steam here.

 


October 17th, 2014 by
This entry was posted on Friday, October 17th, 2014 at 5:09 and is filed under Gaming, General, PC. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

 Comments 

There are no comments yet for this post.


 Leave A Reply 

You must be logged in to post a comment.