Compare Cobi Treasure (Deluxe) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Cobra Mobile. Published by KISS Ltd.. Released on 5/23/2014. Available on PC. Genres: Casual.

Three game modes, a seahorse mascot, and roughly two hours until you've seen everything it has to offer. Fine for a quick match-3 fix, frustrating as a long-term purchase.

My honest first impression of Cobi Treasure Deluxe was that it felt like a mobile game that had been zipped up and deposited on Steam without anyone asking whether the move was a good idea. That is not entirely an insult. The core loop, matching falling ocean gems before they pile up on the seabed, is the kind of thing that clicks fast, requires zero onboarding, and genuinely scratches a specific itch on a slow afternoon. Developer Cobra Mobile built something competent here. It just has obvious limits that will matter depending on who you are. The game runs across three modes, each with its own scoring system, high-score tables, medals, and a player-level progression layer that gives you a loose sense of advancement. Think of it as Tetris logic crossed with classic match-3 colour-sorting: gems fall in a side-scrolling underwater presentation, you match groups before they hit the floor, and the pace creeps up as you go. The visual style is soft and inoffensive, the audio is exactly the kind of light aquatic loop you would expect, and the difficulty does scale, so there is at least a short difficulty curve to push against. The ceiling is the problem. Community feedback is blunt about this: hitting a personal best in all three modes is roughly a two-hour exercise, after which there is genuinely nothing new to find. No campaign, no unlockable content beyond medals, no multiplayer hooks. The Steam review score lands in mixed territory with a slim majority of positive votes, and that split tells you everything. Players who wanted a quick, no-stress score-chaser got what they paid for. Players who expected more substantial content walked away flat. The system requirements are practically ancient by modern standards, XP-era specs, which confirms the game's origins as a port of a much older mobile title. There is nothing wrong with that lineage if you go in with matching expectations. This is airport-lounge gaming on a PC: light, repetitive by design, completely undemanding on your hardware or your attention span. If you have kids who enjoy colour-matching puzzles, or if you are specifically hunting something to run on a low-spec machine during a commute or a break, Cobi Treasure Deluxe passes the test. For anyone else, the content-to-time ratio makes it a hard sell at anything above a deep discount price. Alex, Scout Team

Cobi Treasure (Deluxe)
Casual

Cobi Treasure (Deluxe)

May 23, 2014Cobra MobileKISS Ltd.
GamerScout Says

Three game modes, a seahorse mascot, and roughly two hours until you've seen everything it has to offer. Fine for a quick match-3 fix, frustrating as a long-term purchase.

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About Cobi Treasure (Deluxe)

My honest first impression of Cobi Treasure Deluxe was that it felt like a mobile game that had been zipped up and deposited on Steam without anyone asking whether the move was a good idea. That is not entirely an insult. The core loop, matching falling ocean gems before they pile up on the seabed, is the kind of thing that clicks fast, requires zero onboarding, and genuinely scratches a specific itch on a slow afternoon. Developer Cobra Mobile built something competent here. It just has obvious limits that will matter depending on who you are. The game runs across three modes, each with its own scoring system, high-score tables, medals, and a player-level progression layer that gives you a loose sense of advancement. Think of it as Tetris logic crossed with classic match-3 colour-sorting: gems fall in a side-scrolling underwater presentation, you match groups before they hit the floor, and the pace creeps up as you go. The visual style is soft and inoffensive, the audio is exactly the kind of light aquatic loop you would expect, and the difficulty does scale, so there is at least a short difficulty curve to push against. The ceiling is the problem. Community feedback is blunt about this: hitting a personal best in all three modes is roughly a two-hour exercise, after which there is genuinely nothing new to find. No campaign, no unlockable content beyond medals, no multiplayer hooks. The Steam review score lands in mixed territory with a slim majority of positive votes, and that split tells you everything. Players who wanted a quick, no-stress score-chaser got what they paid for. Players who expected more substantial content walked away flat. The system requirements are practically ancient by modern standards, XP-era specs, which confirms the game's origins as a port of a much older mobile title. There is nothing wrong with that lineage if you go in with matching expectations. This is airport-lounge gaming on a PC: light, repetitive by design, completely undemanding on your hardware or your attention span. If you have kids who enjoy colour-matching puzzles, or if you are specifically hunting something to run on a low-spec machine during a commute or a break, Cobi Treasure Deluxe passes the test. For anyone else, the content-to-time ratio makes it a hard sell at anything above a deep discount price. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

steamMatch-3Score AttackMobile PortSide ViewLow-Spec FriendlyShort SessionArcade Puzzle

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
51%(378)

Game Info

Developer
Cobra Mobile
Publisher
KISS Ltd.
Release Date
May 23, 2014

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