Compara los precios de Mermaid Adventures: The Magic Pearl en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por First Games Interactive. Publicado por First Games Interactive. Lanzado el 16/12/2020. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Casual, Indie.

A hand-drawn underwater puzzle that blends match-3 tile-clearing with hidden object hunts across 80 levels. Cozy, undemanding, built for a quiet afternoon rather than a gaming session.

My first thought booting this up was: somebody clearly loves the undersea cartoon aesthetic and committed to it fully. The hand-drawn characters, the soft colour palette, the little animations when you clear a chain of tiles - none of it feels slapped together. First Games Interactive has been making small-audience casual games for a long time, and The Magic Pearl carries that quiet confidence of a studio that knows exactly who it is making something for. The core loop alternates between two modes. Match-3 stages ask you to clear gem tiles from a grid, building chains of three or more to progress. Sprinkled between those are hidden object scenes where you hunt for listed items inside detailed underwater illustrations. The contrast works better than you might expect - when the match-3 board tightens up and the last few stubborn tiles refuse to clear (a genuinely frustrating mechanic the community has flagged), swapping to a calmer hidden object scene resets the mood. Power-up collectibles add a light layer of strategy to the match-3 half, though nothing here approaches the depth of a Puzzle Quest or a Gem of War. The design intention is relaxation first, challenge second. Where the game earns real affection is in its visual personality. Alice and her companion Crabby have a warmth to them that bigger-budget casual titles often sand away in favour of polish. The underwater world feels hand-crafted rather than templated, and that specificity matters when you are spending time inside 80 levels. The hidden object scenes in particular reward slow attention - they have the quiet density of a good illustrated children's book, and the mood they create carries a faint sense of wonder that I was not expecting. The honest caveats: this is not a long game by any definition. Expect two to four hours depending on how methodically you approach the hidden object portions. The match-3 half lacks a hint or assist system that would genuinely help on those stall-out levels where tiles stop spawning usefully - the game just waits for you to find a line. There is no difficulty setting. The story, involving a stolen pearl and a villainous octopus named Sprutto, is light context rather than driving narrative. If you want puzzle depth, look elsewhere. If you want a serene, hand-illustrated way to spend a lunch break, this has its own gentle frequency. Kai, Scout Team

Mermaid Adventures: The Magic Pearl

Mermaid Adventures: The Magic Pearl

16 dic 2020First Games Interactive
GamerScout opina

A hand-drawn underwater puzzle that blends match-3 tile-clearing with hidden object hunts across 80 levels. Cozy, undemanding, built for a quiet afternoon rather than a gaming session.

PC
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Mínimo histórico: €0.64

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My first thought booting this up was: somebody clearly loves the undersea cartoon aesthetic and committed to it fully. The hand-drawn characters, the soft colour palette, the little animations when you clear a chain of tiles - none of it feels slapped together. First Games Interactive has been making small-audience casual games for a long time, and The Magic Pearl carries that quiet confidence of a studio that knows exactly who it is making something for. The core loop alternates between two modes. Match-3 stages ask you to clear gem tiles from a grid, building chains of three or more to progress. Sprinkled between those are hidden object scenes where you hunt for listed items inside detailed underwater illustrations. The contrast works better than you might expect - when the match-3 board tightens up and the last few stubborn tiles refuse to clear (a genuinely frustrating mechanic the community has flagged), swapping to a calmer hidden object scene resets the mood. Power-up collectibles add a light layer of strategy to the match-3 half, though nothing here approaches the depth of a Puzzle Quest or a Gem of War. The design intention is relaxation first, challenge second. Where the game earns real affection is in its visual personality. Alice and her companion Crabby have a warmth to them that bigger-budget casual titles often sand away in favour of polish. The underwater world feels hand-crafted rather than templated, and that specificity matters when you are spending time inside 80 levels. The hidden object scenes in particular reward slow attention - they have the quiet density of a good illustrated children's book, and the mood they create carries a faint sense of wonder that I was not expecting. The honest caveats: this is not a long game by any definition. Expect two to four hours depending on how methodically you approach the hidden object portions. The match-3 half lacks a hint or assist system that would genuinely help on those stall-out levels where tiles stop spawning usefully - the game just waits for you to find a line. There is no difficulty setting. The story, involving a stolen pearl and a villainous octopus named Sprutto, is light context rather than driving narrative. If you want puzzle depth, look elsewhere. If you want a serene, hand-illustrated way to spend a lunch break, this has its own gentle frequency.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayertier:sub-5Hidden ObjectMatch-3Hand-drawn ArtCozyFamily FriendlyShort PlaythroughUnderwater SettingPower-ups

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows Xp or later
Memory
2000 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
1000 Mb
Processor
1 GHz
Sound Card
sb16

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
First Games Interactive
Distribuidora
First Games Interactive
Fecha de lanzamiento
16 dic 2020

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Mermaid Adventures: The Magic Pearl?

Mermaid Adventures: The Magic Pearl está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Mermaid Adventures: The Magic Pearl?

Mermaid Adventures: The Magic Pearl se lanzó el 16 de diciembre de 2020.

¿Quién desarrolló Mermaid Adventures: The Magic Pearl?

Mermaid Adventures: The Magic Pearl fue desarrollado por First Games Interactive.