What if Tetris got sloppy and wild?

Cryptic Sea (best known forGishandHockey?) just released a new set of games for Mac, Windows and Linux fora paltry $3. I haven’t gotten that deep into the collection yet, but by far the most striking entry inCryptic Sea EPisVolta —a new take on the falling block puzzle genre.

Most puzzle games appeal to the part of the brain that functions like a calculator, which is nice if you want to feel like the concepts of logic and order aren’t just illusions. Sadly, that part of the brain can’t help us to feel like a child taking their first ever jump on a trampoline.Voltaworks to bring those those two feelings together, and the tension they bring out is fantastic. It mischievously defies the cold logic that usually comes from putting blocks together by giving them a chaotic life all their own.

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In life, things rarely fit together without some unpredictable, profitable, or detrimental bumps along the way. Why should things be any different in our puzzle games?

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