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Chessarama Review

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Home Games

Chessarama Review: A Regal Refresh Of An Age-old Classic

Chessarama Modernizes The Ancient Classic With Style And Personality To Spare Through Gorgeously Crafted 3D Dioramas Housing Inventive Designs

Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi by Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi
2 years ago
in Games, Nintendo, PC Games, PlayStation, Reviews Games, Xbox
Reading Time: 6 mins read
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Chessarama brings a creative twist to the ancient game of chess through a series of delightful puzzles and challenges. Developed by Brazilian indie studio Minimol Games, known for their chess-inspired puzzle titles, Chessarama stands as their biggest and most polished project yet.

At its core, Chessarama leverages the rules and mechanics of classic chess in new ways across a variety of game modes. Each presents chess pieces and boards, recontextualized with fresh objectives and obstacles. Far from a stuffy chess simulator, Chessarama wraps innovative puzzles in gorgeous visuals and charming themes, from tended farmlands to gritty street soccer pitches.

While seasoned chess fans may appreciate Chessarama’s novel applications of iconic gameplay, the game shows its true brilliance in opening up chess to a wider audience. Through smartly paced tutorials and challenges, Chessarama coaxes creativity and strategy from players, even those who have never picked up a pawn before. Staff were immediately drawn in by the game’s vibrant and inviting world, finding themselves puzzling out solutions turn after turn.

Though held back by a lackluster chess simulator itself, Chessarama ultimately succeeds at bringing something new to a game as old as chess itself. Its welcoming style paired with thoughtfully designed puzzles add up to an experience fit for newcomers and experts alike. Chess may never be the same again after this inventive revamp.

Puzzles That Make You Rethink Chess

At its heart, Chessarama focuses on a series of chess-inspired logic puzzles and challenges spread across four distinct game modes. Each leverages core chess mechanics in creative new ways, from maneuvering pieces to capture others to escorting central pawns across the board. Vibrant 3D dioramas set the stage for every puzzle, bringing charming life to the age-old chess board.

The campaign kicks off with Farm Life, a series of puzzles based around the classic Knight’s Tour chess challenge. Here a chess knight, reimagined as an overalled farmer, must plow each square of the board once using only its unique L-shaped movements. What seems simple rapidly grows complex, forcing creative routing across irregularly-shaped plots. Additional objectives spice things up further, like finishing on specifically designated squares.

Street Soccer emerges as the campaign’s standout, centering gameplay around working cooperatively to kick a ball into a goal. Chess pieces must pass along straight line paths into the net, weaving through obstructions like cones or blockers. It effectively remixes ideas of opportunity and movement from regular chess in delightful new ways. Players must envision possibilities beyond just capturing pieces, bringing an entirely fresh angle.

Later modes like Lady Ronin and Dragon Slayers further showcase the ingenuity underpinning Chessarama’s designs. The former arms a lone queen piece against an onslaught of enemies in elimination puzzles about cunning positioning. The latter has players escort a vulnerable pawn to a far end of the board, fending off a marauding dragon along the way. Both amplify classic chess tension in all new contexts.

Every step of the journey, Chessarama slowly folds in new concepts, ensuring newcomers never feel overwhelmed. Clean tutorial prompts help onboard players on base mechanics before each new mode while bite-sized early challenges let them apply skills in straightforward ways. Even experts will appreciate how later optional objectives push problem solving dexterity to the limits, however.

Presented with vivid, toy-like game pieces and boards, Chessarama keeps its visual information clear at all times. Soft ambient music backs up the cheerful playset look and feel. Players can expect to mute things eventually as tracks repeat endlessly, but they set an appropriate lighthearted mood. Between the welcoming style and smartly tuned learning curve, Chessarama casts an inviting spell from start to finish.

Chess Made Captivating Through Sight And Sound

Beyond smart core gameplay, Chessarama entices the eyes and ears with delightful presentation. Sun-bathed farmlands and lively cityscapes fill out 3D dioramas behind 2D chess boards. Wandering townsfolk and swaying vegetation bring charming life to scenes without overriding central puzzles. The visual approach sticks to a friendly, playful art style – vibrant colors and chunky models exude a warm, welcoming toybox feel. Distinct character silhouettes make different chess pieces clearly identifiable as they hop playfully about grids.

Chessarama Review

Matching the aesthetic, friendly ambient music sets an upbeat mood for lighthearted play. Gentle acoustics pair with farmyard brainteasers as tropical beats underscore street soccer challenges. It captures Chessarama’s spirit well, though repetitive looping may drive players to silence things eventually. Crisp, cartoony sounds add flair to every move and capture too.

Altogether Chessarama’s presentation choices compliment its core ethos – an experience open and enjoyable for all. The vibrant style eases in newcomers without sacrificing depth for experts. And by encasing inventive gameplay inside enchanting sights and sounds, Chessarama makes rediscovering chess exciting from start to finish. The result remains a true standout – sure to thrill both eyes and ears alike.

Steady Progression To Hold Interest

Keeping players engaged over the long term, Chessarama incorporates a progression system with plenty of rewards to unlock. An XP-based leveling path gates access to later content, ensuring beginners acclimate before diving deeper. At the same time, dedicated players find replay incentive through branching challenge modes.

Chessarama Review

Core progression revolves around an XP system tied to completing puzzles and tackling bonus objectives. Accruing enough experience unlocks successive playmodes and cosmetics. Players will need to best earlier levels multiple times to open up all content. This helps prevent overhwhelming novices while encouraging mastery, though may frustrate some wanting to immediately access other modes.

Puzzles themselves feature optional bonus challenges of varying difficulty. Early on these provide straightforward tests, like limiting moves or captures. Later, clever multi-part tasks push problem solving skills further. Trying to complete all challenges requires approaching levels from different angles – adding plenty of replayability. Lady Ronin’s combat puzzles prove particularly ripe for replay thanks to tricky layered objectives.

Beyond intrinsic rewards of deeper mastery, Chessarama also incentivizes through cosmetic collectibles. Completing certain challenges in campaign modes unlocks themed chess piece sets. These become available after winning head-to-head battles as well. It’s fun to mix-and-match styles, though the cosmetics only apply to asynchronous online matches. Players hoping to flaunt their puzzles rewards in real-time chess will be disappointed.

On the whole Chessarama offers plenty for both casual fans and devoted puzzle-solvers to enjoy. A clean progression path guides new players in while avoiding trivializing early content. Meanwhile experts appreciate the additional tests layered into every puzzle, even if some incentives don’t feel fully rewarding.

Passable Multiplayer Can’t Capture Magic

Beyond the excellent single-player campaign, Chessarama incorporates competitive multiplayer components as well. Players can test puzzle-solving skills against others in asynchronous battle modes or traditional head-to-head chess showdowns. While functional enough, the online features fail to capture the magic of the core experience.

Chessarama Review

Echoing campaign levels, Battle Modes leverage similar themes and mechanics for race-style challenges. Players take turns in a shared lobby, maneuvering kings or pawns to outscore opponents. Simple leaderboards drive rivalry here, though limited game length hinders engagement. The mode feels supplemental rather than essential.

The game also allows standard chess matches through its online servers. Functionally it succeeds at replicating the classic game, albeit with fixed short time limits. However arriving at the multiplayer section feels unintuitive, buried behind single-player progression gates. And barebones presentation in this mode strips away all the magnetic personality powering earlier puzzles.

Once in matches, the asynchronous play against random opponents carries little stakes or tension too. Players hoping for rewarding competitive chess action won’t find it. At best the offering provides quick supplementary play for campaign veterans. Those seeking serious online rivalry should look to dedicated servers on chess platforms instead though.

In the end Chessarama’s online features feel supplementary rather than essential. The novel concepts energizing the solo experience get lost in translation for multiplayer. While the foundations prove technically competent, the game’s magic stems from its charm and creativity – both sadly missing in online play. The inclusion adds some value but fails to truly excite.

An Instant Classic For Casual And Experts Alike

Boiling it all down, Chessarama delivers a remarkably fun and accessible twist on the ancient classic. Creative puzzles recontextualize chess in delightful new ways, wrapped up in gorgeous presentation. Yet despite revamping the formula, it retains the GAME_TITLE’s magic. Newcomers and experts alike find rewarding challenges without alienation.

Chessarama Review

None have fused approachability and depth so well in this genre before. Chess Ultra offers a slick simulation but lacks Chessarama’s inventiveness. Really Bad Chess shakes up the formula through randomness rather than carefully tuned designs. Bishop Games titles perhaps come closest in spirit, but still sit firmly in experienced player territory.

In the end Chessarama’s puzzles strike an ingenious balance. Novel objectives and obstacles prevent staleness yet build real skills. Meanwhile the welcoming style opens doors for chess greenhorns without handholding veterans. From overalled farmer knights to street soccer gambits, chess has never felt so fresh and inviting.

Approachable yet endlessly substantial, Chessarama represents the new gold standard for casual-competitive hybrids. Its harmonious blend of creativity and finesse make for virtually guaranteed crowd pleaser. So whether you’re a lifelong chesshead or have never touched a pawn, this is one an adventure fit for all players. The only question now is if the chess world will ever be same again after this zany reinvention?

The Review

Chessarama

9 Score

Chessarama delivers a brilliant revamp of the ancient classic for both casual fans and hardcore chessheads alike. Its gorgeous presentation pairs wonderfully with creative puzzles that reveal chess’ endless versatility through fresh mechanics and contexts. Aside from online play failing to match the magic of its solo offerings, the game fires on all cylinders for an accessible yet endlessly substantial experience. Chessarama modernizes aged gameplay in ways unmatched by contemporaries. Harmoniously blending innovation with approachability, this represents a new gold standard for drawing players outside the competitive niche into wonderful worlds where chess forms the foundation rather than focus.

PROS

  • Creative puzzles offer fresh takes on chess mechanics and rules
  • Smart learning curve and pacing for newcomers
  • Gorgeous and charming visual presentation
  • Addictive campaign structure with challenging optional objectives
  • Encourages chess skills development unintentionally
  • Fun theme and personality that brings warmth to the format

CONS

  • Lackluster and confusing implementation of chess simulator
  • Online multiplayer features fail to match single player highs
  • Music can become repetitive and annoying over long play sessions
  • Some progression/unlock systems feel superficial or disappointing

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Casual gameChessaramaFeaturedHawthorn GamesMinimol GamesPuzzle Video GameStrategyStrategy Video Game
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