Game mechanics involve repositioning matchsticks to fix equations or create new ones. I tried dragging sticks around and the physics can be wonky, making precise placement tricky. This simple puzzle game makes your brain work just enough to annoy you after a while.
Dragging matchsticks around is the main action. You just tap and hold to move sticks, there are no complicated menus. The game features puzzles where you reposition matchsticks to fix equations or create new ones, which looks easy but gets annoying when you get stuck on a tricky problem. It can be addictive when you finally solve one after some frustration.
Often, you will tap and hold to move sticks around. The controls let you drag matchsticks easily, which is kinda weird anyway, because the physics can be wonky. There are no complicated menus, which is nice. You reposition matchsticks to fix equations or create new ones, and their puzzles test your patience. It is straightforward but can get somewhat tricky with tricky puzzles.
Simple tip: Focus on the matchstick positions first. I found that dragging sticks is easier then trying to guess the solution. The game lets you reposition matchsticks to fix equations or create new ones. The physics can be wonky, making precise placement tricky, so just tap and hold to move sticks. There are no complicated menus, which is nice.
Dragons are not in this game, but the core thingy is matchstick repositioning. You drag sticks to fix equations or create new ones, which is the main stuff. The controls are simple: tap and hold to move sticks. The physics can be wonky, making precise placement tricky. There are no complicated menus. It is a puzzle game that makes your brain work just enough to annoy you after a while, and it gets annoying when you get stuck on a tricky problem. It can be addictive when you finally solve one after some frustration.