JayisGames.com is now available ad-free!
Jay is Games recommends Cheat Happens with 8,000+ games and 35,000+ trainers!

  • Review

  • Browser Games

Magnets


  • Currently 3.3/5
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Rating: 3.3/5 (41 votes)
Comments (7) | Views (7,361)

DoraMagnetsIs Bill Nye designing games these days? Because Magnets, the newest, sleekest physics puzzle on the block, seems like his doing. Guiding a projectile, either positive or negative, around Legos, pencils, and other desktop debris by placing different sizes and types of magnets around to manipulate the path? You can't fool us! You can't make us learn! Nnngh... oh no, it's happening already! Brain... absorbing coordinates! Plotting... trajectories! Noooo, our cherished ignorance! How will we memorize pop culture quotes with all that stupid knowledge in our brains?!

The good news is, Magnets, from Candystand, is hardly as dull as your average classroom lesson. Similar to recent feature MagnetiZR, Magnets is considerably less flashy but a good deal more tricky. At the bottom of the screen lies a menu that grants you access to different magnets. Big, small, positive, negative, and even types able to polarity at a click. Once you've arranged your magnets by clicking and dragging them where you want them, click "Start" or hit [space] to fire. Pay close attention to the way different magnet types and sizes affect the speed and direction of your projectile, and you'll find your way to the target in no time.

The tricky bit? Each magnet placed and every adjustment you make to it after deducts a certain amount from your score. The more magnets you place, and the longer you fiddle with them, the more your score will fall. It becomes a test of getting to the target with your score as intact as you can manage, and if you find yourself stymied and unwilling to break away from the computer screen until you finish it, you can always use your sweet, frustrated tears as nourishment. Fortunately, you can "sell" a magnet back by dragging it back over the menu and releasing it.

Easily one of the things that makes Magnets stand out the most, however, is the design. Clean, uncluttered, sharp and simple, it's easy on the eyes and ears. But as tightly designed as Magnets is, there are a few sticking points. It can be difficult to place magnets as close to the bottom of the screen as you might like, since moving too close to it triggers the buy menu. And why do the hints you can purchase with your score early on simply vanish later in the game instead of simply becoming more and more expensive?

MagnetsAnalysis: While I'm sure the creators have plotted out a careful solution to each level, full of magnets placed just so for the least cost and most efficient of movements, you're able to win with much less finesse. Stitching together a Frankenstein's playfield of magnets stapled helter-skelter about to produce a functional yet ugly and inefficient path works just as well.

But while it's possible to pass all the levels with haphazard placement, your score will suffer for it. And it's not quite as satisfying as looking at the path in front of you, feeling something click in your head, and realising you can solve the puzzle with three pieces instead of seven. Sure you've got ten or more magnets available to use, but the real challenge is figuring out how few of them you actually need. And once the hints vanish in later levels, you'll have to spend some time really plotting out your courses to get the best results.

The physics/puzzle super-genre is getting quite the workout these days, and it's getting harder and harder to stand out. Happily, Magnets manages to succeed by refining the base concept and wrapping it up in one sleek, shiny little package for you. While we're not talking breathless excitement here (oooohhhh boy, it went around the pencil!), Mangets may not take any risks, but is a very fine brain teaser indeed, and a perfectionists' worst nightmare. Is that the best score you can come up with? Are you sure?

Play Magnets

7 Comments

stevedave October 1, 2009 12:22 PM

I see the ad, but no game. :(

Reply

Nice music, clean graphics, but the game is just not pick-up-and-play.

Reply

Seriously inferior to MagnetiZR, for the reasons I mentioned in that review. Having to find that one pixel that each magnet needs to exactly be on just sucks. After moving the magnet a pixel or two for the 10th time on the second level, I quit, and won't be back.

Reply

It's either too tedious via nudging magnets over one pixel at a time, or too easy by

making trains of reversable magnets and passing the balls from one to the next over and over again.

Reply

You can't make us learn! Nnngh... oh no, it's happening already! Brain... absorbing coordinates! Plotting... trajectories!

Don't worry! Everything this game is teaching you about magnets is false. Magnets have, y'know, north and south poles.

This seems to actually be a game about charged particles.

Reply

There is literally no reason to use anything other than

the reversible magnets, just shoot the particle between one magnet and the next, until you get at a good angle for the goal.
When you have more than one particle to keep track of, just make some extras to "store" the next particles until you need them.

Reply

^ Scroll Up | Homepage >

Leave a comment [top of page]

Please consider creating a Casual Gameplay account if you're a regular visitor here, as it will allow us to create an even better experience for you. Sign-up here!
  • PLEASE UNDERSTAND SITE POLICIES BEFORE POSTING COMMENTS
  • You may use limited HTML tags for style:
    (a href, b, br/, strong, em, ul, ol, li, code, spoiler)
    HTML tags begin with a less-than sign: < and end with a greater-than sign: >. Always. No exceptions.
  • To post spoilers, please use spoiler tags: <spoiler> example </spoiler>
    If you need help understanding spoiler tags, read the spoiler help.
  • Please Preview your comment before posting, especially when using spoilers!
  • No link dropping, no domains as names; do not spam, and do not advertise! (rel="nofollow" in use)
chrpa Jayisgames needs your help to continue providing quality content. Click for details Welcome to the Roundup 66 - Retro with four games! After you find the ten monkeys in the chapter, look in the inventory. You will find a...  ...
chrpa Jayisgames needs your help to continue providing quality content. Click for details Welcome to the Roundup 65 with three games! As mentioned in the previous roundups, only odd-numbered episodes are featured since even-numbered are for Robin Vencel's patrons (the...  ...
chrpa Jayisgames needs your help to continue providing quality content. Click for details Hi! Weekday Escape and Weekday Puzzle are here! First we have two new cans from tomoLaSiDo and then two small rooms from isotronic. That's all for this...  ...
6,365 Views
0 Comments
chrpa Jayisgames needs your help to continue providing quality content. Click for details Welcome to Mobile Monday! We have another beautiful game from Nicolet and it's a winter game as it should be. Tasuku Yahiro have released another of their...  ...

HELP Jayisgames.com

Recent Comments

 

Display 5 more comments
Limit to the last 5 comments

Game of the week


Dark Romance: Vampire Origins Collector's Edition

Your Favorite Games edit

add
Save links to your favorite games here. Use the Favorites editor.

Monthly Archives