Puzzle games exist in many forms, from first person shooters like Halo to dramatic test settings like the Ace Attorney series. Chessaria: The Tactical Adventure presents them in their purest form. It’s the game of chess, remastered and expanded. Chessaria is an innovative way to introduce the game to a new audience and challenge existing players.

Chessaria: the tactical adventure review |  Gammick

Game

Each chess piece has been converted into a person and each has their own role to play on the board. Each piece also has a unique voice and battle movement, whether it’s sliding across the board or defeating another piece. I found them funny. But if you’d rather just finish the move, you have the option to turn off the animation feature. The graphics are attractive, nothing too intricate, but clean and stylized.

You can also adjust the difficulty of the game. This allows new players to enter the board without feeling intimidated by it as otherwise. For more experienced gamers, they can increase the challenge and the computer gamer is no idiot.

What really sets Chessaria: The Tactical Adventure apart are its motivators. Frankly, it’s easy to get bored playing computer-based board games. After hitting the computer a couple of times, you really have nothing left to accomplish. It can be difficult to generate motivation in your gamer audience to get them to keep playing.

And this is where Chessaria excels. You have numerous options on how to set up your game. But there is also an adventure mode that gives you access to more boards and types of players.

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Philip Owell

Professional blogger, here to bring you new and interesting content every time you visit our blog.