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Monday

Blendoku Review


Blendoku is game that has been on the Google Store for some time now. And I'm surprised that this game did not get much attention, because I am having so much fun with this game since I downloaded it to my Android device a few days ago. So why should you give this game a chance?. Well please read on fellow gamers…
Now Blendoku is a fun, addictive, puzzle game. And instead of using numbers, the player is using colors into order. And Blendoku meets all the other requirements for a standard puzzle game. I love the fact that this game is very simple and it is also original.
When you first start the game you will be given s short tutorial, the player must place the blocks of the color on the correct location of the grid. Just like in the game Sudoku, each grid will begin with one or more block that are already in their correct, position.  A block's placement is dependent on every other block it touches.  The mechanic that defines this relationship, though, is not numerical values or amount per quadrant, but the subtle blending of colors.
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Every block that must be placed on the grid contains some hue level of at least one other block.  Puzzles vary from a single color scheme—ordering blocks from dark blue to light blue, for instance—to very blended colors—like beginning with black and blending all the way to hot pink.  The latter of these might progress from black to dark gray, medium gray with a touch of red, light gray with a hint of pink, and so on, with an even progression of colors creating the chain from color A to color B.
Many of Blendoku's levels can be handled intuitively if you have half a grasp on how color works. You'll get through them in the few seconds it takes to drag the square color samples from the palette above to the play field below. It's okay that they're quick, though. There are 475 of them, all for free. 75 are complex enough that they're only really playable on a tablet, but even so: 400 levels ranging from dead simple to mind-breaking. There are four levels of difficulty available—Simple, Medium, Hard, and Master—and each features a staggering number of stages—150 apiece for Simple and Medium, 100 for Hard, and 75 for Master.  Within each difficulty itself, stages increase in complexity gradually, with intermittent breaks.  This means you may solve a large 20-color grid and then receive a smaller, 10-color stage next.  Not only does this provide a brain break, but it also helps prevent becoming discouraged if you cannot solve a stage and choose to skip it.
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Blendoku's concept is similar to the game of Pool ( billiards) it is easy to learn, but difficult to master.  Now it game may be difficult for those who may be color blind, and sad to say there is not color blind mode. Blendoku is free at the Google Play Store. This game is all fun with beautiful colors. So why not give this puzzle game a chance?