401 projects tagged "Puzzle Games"
JSokoban is a port of the classic Macintosh puzzle game in which players try to shift the money bags of each level to a given position. The game comes with over 200 levels of varying difficulty, sound, unlimited undos/redos, and support for moving using both the keyboard and mouse.
3Doku brings the traditional Sudoku game to the third dimension. In a 9x9x9 cube, 27 Sudoku schemas intersect one another along the three axis. Every 9x9 bi-dimensional schema must be solved, keeping in mind that every single cell belongs to the selected schema and also to the other two placed on the orthogonal planes. With 4 difficulty levels and 4 initial values distributions, you can customize your game and have every time a new exciting challenge to solve.
TuxWordSmith is similar to the classic word game "Scrabble", but with Unicode support for multiple languages and character sets. The game is currently distributed with 42 dictionary resources for playing Language[i]-Language[j] "Scrabble". For example, if configured to use the French-German dictionary, then the distribution of available tiles will be computed based on frequency of occurrence of each character of Language[i] (French), and, for each submission, the corresponding definition will be given in Language[j] (German).
Jewelbox is an addicting PalmOS game of falling colored pieces. Match up three or more blocks of the same color to win points. Pieces can be matched vertically, horizontally, and diagonally. Your palm buttons control the game play. The game features sound effects. Both monochrome and color devices are supported.
Rebound is a reimplementation of the game called Diamonds which existed for the Macintosh in the early 90s. It is a cross between a puzzle and an action game. The game play requires the player to use the ball on the screen to hit bricks and destroy them. However, rather than hitting the ball with a paddle like breakout, the player controls the left and right movement of the ball with the arrow keys. The ball still bounces up and down on its own, but there is no bottom to fall off of.