Compare Anime Cards prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by wow wow Games. Published by wow wow Games. Released on 6/29/2021. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie.

If your brain needs a five-minute warmup and anime art is your comfort zone, this memory-matching puzzler delivers exactly that - nothing more, nothing less.

I'll be straight with you: I came into this one looking for a hidden gem and left with a shrug that respects its honesty. Anime Cards is a memory-matching game - flip two face-down cards, find the matching pair, clear the board. That format is older than most of the people reading this, and wow wow Games has not reinvented it in any way. What you get is the purest, most stripped-back version of the format that exists on Steam. The structure is simple: 20 levels unlock sequentially, each one bumping up the difficulty by adding more cards to the grid. You flip two at a time, the mismatches flip back face-down, and your job is to hold a mental map of what you saw and where. The personal best system gives you a reason to replay each level if you care about attempt counts, and the developer frames that as a soft competitive hook you can use with a friend in the same room. That framing is a little generous - real head-to-head memory games have been a tabletop staple forever, and the asynchronous record-sharing here is thin by comparison. The anime art is the product's one deliberate choice, and it does its job as a visual theme. The illustrations are colorful and stylized, the cards feel cute rather than cluttered, and the overall palette is easy on the eyes across a full session. What the game does not have is a meaningful soundscape. There is no ambient audio that makes the act of sitting with the board feel like anything. That absence matters in a genre where rhythm and atmosphere can transform a repetitive loop into something meditative. Here the loop stays mechanical. The community reception from the handful of reviewers on record lands squarely in mixed territory. The recurring criticism, echoed across multiple sources, is that the core mechanic is unmodified and the content feels thin - a fair read. There are no twist modes, no card effects, no narrative reason to care about which picture you are matching. The anime aesthetic is window dressing, not a layer of craft. If you are someone who has played every interesting memory-game variant Steam has to offer and just wants the base format with a comfortable visual skin, Anime Cards delivers that with zero friction. If you want depth, personality, or a sense that a developer poured love into the smallest details, this is not the place to look. I can advocate for slow games, sparse games, even quiet games when they know what they are and play to it. This one knows what it is. My honest read is that it belongs in a ten-minute session with a younger sibling, or as the kind of idle palate cleanser you run while half-watching something else. Expect that, and it meets the brief. Kai, Scout Team

Anime Cards
CasualIndie

Anime Cards

Jun 29, 2021wow wow Games
GamerScout Says

If your brain needs a five-minute warmup and anime art is your comfort zone, this memory-matching puzzler delivers exactly that - nothing more, nothing less.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About Anime Cards

I'll be straight with you: I came into this one looking for a hidden gem and left with a shrug that respects its honesty. Anime Cards is a memory-matching game - flip two face-down cards, find the matching pair, clear the board. That format is older than most of the people reading this, and wow wow Games has not reinvented it in any way. What you get is the purest, most stripped-back version of the format that exists on Steam. The structure is simple: 20 levels unlock sequentially, each one bumping up the difficulty by adding more cards to the grid. You flip two at a time, the mismatches flip back face-down, and your job is to hold a mental map of what you saw and where. The personal best system gives you a reason to replay each level if you care about attempt counts, and the developer frames that as a soft competitive hook you can use with a friend in the same room. That framing is a little generous - real head-to-head memory games have been a tabletop staple forever, and the asynchronous record-sharing here is thin by comparison. The anime art is the product's one deliberate choice, and it does its job as a visual theme. The illustrations are colorful and stylized, the cards feel cute rather than cluttered, and the overall palette is easy on the eyes across a full session. What the game does not have is a meaningful soundscape. There is no ambient audio that makes the act of sitting with the board feel like anything. That absence matters in a genre where rhythm and atmosphere can transform a repetitive loop into something meditative. Here the loop stays mechanical. The community reception from the handful of reviewers on record lands squarely in mixed territory. The recurring criticism, echoed across multiple sources, is that the core mechanic is unmodified and the content feels thin - a fair read. There are no twist modes, no card effects, no narrative reason to care about which picture you are matching. The anime aesthetic is window dressing, not a layer of craft. If you are someone who has played every interesting memory-game variant Steam has to offer and just wants the base format with a comfortable visual skin, Anime Cards delivers that with zero friction. If you want depth, personality, or a sense that a developer poured love into the smallest details, this is not the place to look. I can advocate for slow games, sparse games, even quiet games when they know what they are and play to it. This one knows what it is. My honest read is that it belongs in a ten-minute session with a younger sibling, or as the kind of idle palate cleanser you run while half-watching something else. Expect that, and it meets the brief. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:sub-5Memory MatchGrid PuzzleScore AttackPersonal BestCasual PuzzlerLow Session LengthAnime AestheticLevel Unlock Progression

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7; 8; 10
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
71 MB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce 9600 GSO 512
Processor
Intel(R) Celeron(R) CPU G530 @2.40 GHz

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce 9600 GSO 1024
Processor
Intel(R) Celeron(R) CPU G530 @2.40 GHz

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Game Info

Developer
wow wow Games
Publisher
wow wow Games
Release Date
Jun 29, 2021

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What platforms is Anime Cards available on?

Anime Cards is available on PC.

When was Anime Cards released?

Anime Cards was released on 29 June 2021.

Who developed Anime Cards?

Anime Cards was developed by wow wow Games.