
Beautiful Japanese Scenery - Animated Jigsaws
Ten looping video scenes from Japan's most iconic spots, cut into jigsaw pieces and reassembled on a PC screen. Relaxing in concept, honest in scope, and exactly what it says on the tin for anyone who wants a low-stakes puzzle session.
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About Beautiful Japanese Scenery - Animated Jigsaws
My strategy-and-sim brain usually demands layers: tech trees, branching economies, late-game complexity. So when I sat down with Beautiful Japanese Scenery - Animated Jigsaws, I had to recalibrate my expectations hard. This is a single-purpose casual puzzle game from Tokyo-based BottleCube, and once you accept that premise completely, the question becomes less "is this deep" and more "does it do its one job well." The answer is a qualified yes, with a few caveats worth spelling out before you commit. The core hook is genuinely interesting: instead of a static photograph, each puzzle uses a short looping video clip as its image. Snow Monkeys soak in a hot spring, cherry blossoms drift across the frame, the Shibuya crossing pulses with foot traffic. There are ten scenes in total, pulling from all four seasons and covering landmarks including Mt. Fuji, Kyoto, and the Tokyo skyline. Each scene can be tackled at 60, 120, or 240 pieces, which gives you a meaningful difficulty ramp. The 60-piece entry tier is genuinely solved in under five minutes, while a 240-piece run on something like the animated Tokyo skyline can stretch past an hour and a half. The edge-and-inner sorting button is a small but welcome quality-of-life touch that keeps the workspace manageable. Pieces snap into place when correctly positioned, and a mid-session save means you can walk away without losing progress. Here is where the animation gimmick cuts both ways. Watching a partly assembled puzzle gradually reveal a looping river scene is satisfying in a way that a static photo simply is not. But those same moving images make piece-matching harder, particularly on the busier scenes. When the visual reference is constantly shifting frame-by-frame, matching a sky piece to its neighbours becomes a genuine exercise in patience rather than pure spatial reasoning. There is no option to freeze the animation for reference while you work, which is an odd omission. The background music consists of a handful of traditional Japanese tracks; they set the right mood but loop noticeably, and the option to mute them entirely is worth using once you have heard the set twice. No rotation or flipping of pieces is required, which keeps control friction low and makes this genuinely approachable for non-gamers or older players. On Steam, the game sits at a Very Positive rating across nearly 250 reviews, which tells you the target audience found exactly what they came for. Critics reviewing console ports noted imprecise controls and limited content volume as the main complaints, but those issues are largely irrelevant here on PC with mouse input, where drag-and-drop feels considerably more natural. The content ceiling is real though: ten scenes, three piece counts each, a completion gallery with best-time tracking, and that is the full feature set. No hint system, no piece rotation, no puzzle editor, no additional content packs within this specific title. BottleCube treats it as one entry in a series rather than a platform, so if the format clicks for you, the Wild Animals and Japanese Women entries use the same engine with different footage. For anyone who genuinely enjoys jigsaw puzzles and wants a short screen-time wind-down session with attractive source material, this delivers without friction. For players expecting even light systems depth, or who want a puzzle game with progression hooks, the content runs out fast. It respects your time in the sense that it never wastes it, but it also never gives you a reason to stay longer than the puzzles themselves require. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Doesn't currently run on Linux. Based on 4 ProtonDB community reports.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7 or higer
- DirectX
- Version 9.0c
- Storage
- 450 MB available space
- Graphics
- DirectX9.0 compatible
- Processor
- 1.4GHz or higer
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Reviews & Ratings
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Game Info
- Developer
- BottleCube inc.
- Publisher
- BottleCube inc.
- Release Date
- Sep 15, 2016
