
Artifacting
A sub-dollar match-3 that wraps its tile-swapping in excavation dust and dim candlelight. Worth a glance if you want something quiet and low-stakes for a spare afternoon.
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About Artifacting
I have a soft spot for the kind of micro-release that asks almost nothing of you and still manages to conjure a specific feeling. Artifacting is exactly that kind of game. NikiGames built a match-3 puzzle around the visual language of archaeological digs - crumbling relics, earthy tones, the kind of darkness that suggests candlelit fieldwork rather than gothic menace. The core loop is as stripped-back as the genre gets: align three or more matching artifact tiles in a row within a limited number of moves, hit the minimum point threshold, move to the next level. No power-ups, no energy meters, no mobile-style grinding. Just you, the board, and the budget of moves you have left. What makes this worth a second look over other bargain-bin match-3s is the procedural level design. Each board is generated fresh, so the layout and difficulty curve shift from run to run. That unpredictability keeps the brain mildly engaged even when the mechanics themselves are familiar to the point of muscle memory. The dark, atmospheric presentation does real work here. The muted palette of aged relics and soil-brown backgrounds resists the candy-bright visual noise that defines most of the genre, and the soundtrack - described by the developer as deliberately immersive - adds a low ambient texture that makes the whole thing feel more meditative than competitive. Whether that tone fully lands will depend entirely on your tolerance for minimal aesthetic gestures in very small games. The honest caveat is that Artifacting is genuinely small. There is no narrative, no progression system beyond clearing levels, and no real mechanical escalation beyond harder boards. The 20 Steam achievements give completionists a modest checklist to work through, but anyone expecting depth or content volume will be disappointed well before the hour mark. This is a palate-cleanser, not a destination. It sits in the same drawer as those tiny Flash-era puzzlers that asked nothing of you except a quiet ten minutes. If you are the kind of player who keeps a handful of low-pressure games around for travel or background-noise gaming, Artifacting fills that slot without friction. If you want a match-3 with hooks, upgrade paths, or replayability worth talking about, look elsewhere. NikiGames made something genuinely cozy within very tight constraints, and I respect the self-awareness in not overpromising. It knows what it is. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7/8/10
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- Storage
- 100 MB available space
- Graphics
- 256 mb
- Processor
- DualCore CPU
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Game Info
- Developer
- NikiGames
- Publisher
- NikiGames
- Release Date
- Jun 3, 2021
