Hexceed

PC, free

If I may be indelicate for a moment, I was pretty certain I wasn’t going to write about Hexceed. It’s so very blatantly a Hexcells rip-off that it was all I could do not to just write about how usefully it highlights the brilliance of Hexcells in all the ways it’s not as good as it. That wouldn’t be kind of me. Nobody needs to be told about a game they’d never hear about otherwise, only to be told why they didn’t need to hear about it. Arseholes do that. And then I kept on playing.

And kept on. And kept on. And yes, my instincts were correct: this is a wanton rip-off of Hexcells, that absolutely highlights its inspiration’s glory through its own lack, but hell, I’m still playing. Oh, and it’s free!

I was always a little frustrated by Hexcells’ comparisons to Minesweeper, since the former is the greatest logic puzzle game ever made for computer, and the latter is a tedious game of chance only enjoyed by the dangerously foolish. But I do concede there is some common ground, if only in the premise that the numbers in hexagonal tiles indicate the number of “bombs” that cell is adjacent to. Hexceed actually leans a little further into the overlapping space in that Venn diagram, and impressively, to good effect. Levels are less meticulously designed perfection, and more sprawling expanses, roamed across in a much more Minesweepery fashion – except, crucially, driven only by logic and reason, not stupid guessing.

At the same time, it rather naughtily leans on a lot of assumed knowledge from Hexcells players, in its attempts to be wordless as it expands it’s rules. I can think of no fathomable reason why I should immediately and innately assume a double-green line inside a hex means that the number now applies to not adjacent cells but those in encircling hexes two layers deep. Except, because it hadn’t done that bit of Hexcells yet, I guessed right. Unfortunately, the same is true for pretty much every newly established element, where it requires guessing or failure to assume what the latest symbol indicates. Or indeed to what extent it may indicate it. A red arrow in a numbered hex pointing in a direction means, it turns out, that the number applies only to hexes in that straight line from that point, but not if there’s a barrier.

Yes, it also adds barriers to the mix, that seem to block all rules a hex may apply, apart from those you find it doesn’t, and bah. Come on. Put a few words on the screen saying what they do! How hard is that? No one wants ambiguity in a logic puzzle!

And while I’m just complaining like I said I wouldn’t, by far the strangest and most deleterious decision is to have “move” be on left click and drag, and “remove cell” be on, er, left click. So yes, of course, you endlessly accidentally drag the screen about rather than click on cells, and come on.

I’m fighting against further explaining how the loose design of the many levels here makes me think about just how tight Hexcells really is. Most egregiously in all the clues you find in puzzles that you never need to use to solve them. But be quiet me, because this is calm, methodical work, with a different agenda. It’s about sprawling puzzles to pick away at, rather than resolving perfection. Oh, and you get hundreds of levels for free.

What kind of monster would spend so many words saying what’s wrong with hundreds of puzzles for free? A terrible one. But not an arsehole, because this is worth your attention! It’s not going to live up to its forefather, but then where would we get if we measured every piece of music against Bach? To a silly place, that’s where. And maybe you’ve listened to all the Bach over and over, anyway?

There’s also DLC you can buy, to hand over some money to developer ToastieLabs, and indeed the option for a year-long pass to DLC, suggesting they’re planning to stick with this long-term – a good sign.

It’s free! It’s a bit like Hexcells! It needs the ridiculous decision to have left-click move the puzzle fixed immediately! But it’s definitely worth bringing to your attention.

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4 Comments

  1. You can move with other buttons too, like the non-destructive middle mouse. Otherwise I agree that it’s not as good as Hexcells, but still a cozy thing to play while listening to/watching something. The thing about some effects going through barriers and some not is very weird though.

  2. As a note, you don’t have to guess at the rules. One of the command combinations (left click plus right click, IIRC) will show you exactly which cells a given clue applies to. It’s a good compromise for those initially ambiguous clue types.

  3. There was a 2.0 update for Hexcells Inifinite back in August 2020. They’ve added a new hard mode for the randomly generated puzzles, which in my opinion, brings them up to the level of the hand crafted ones. Definitely worth a look.

  4. I shouldnt complain because its free, but it just isn’t as clever as Hexcells and I barely feel like I’m using my brain when going through the puzzles. There is no ambiguity, it just tells you what every single hex has (no ?s), Tametsi broke my very logical mind and I spent stupid time on every puzzle, this got tiresome quite quickly.

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