
Data mining
Fifty levels of collect-and-dodge puzzle action that clocks in under an hour total. Fine as a five-minute palate cleanser, thin as a main course.
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About Data mining
My spreadsheet instincts fire up whenever I see a game claiming both 'strategy' and 'simulation' in its genre tags, so I went into Data Mining with some genuine curiosity. What I found was considerably smaller in scope than those labels suggest: a 2D arcade-puzzle game where you guide a cursor-like object around each stage, hoovering up uncorrupted data files while sidestepping traps and explosive hazards, until the locked exit opens. That loop describes every one of the 50 levels on offer here, and it takes maybe 45 minutes to an hour to clear the lot. The core mechanic is functional. Traps are placed to create mild spatial puzzles, and a few later stages introduce enough overlapping hazard patterns to require a second or third attempt. The colorful, abstract 2D art keeps things visually readable, and the soundtrack does its job without demanding attention. There is nothing technically broken about the experience. The problem is that the strategic and decision-making layers the genre tags hint at simply are not present. You are not routing paths, managing resources, or weighing tradeoffs. You are pressing arrow keys until the exit unlocks. Calling this a strategy game is a stretch that benefits nobody shopping for actual strategy. Blender Games built a long franchise out of this formula, releasing numbered sequels up through Data Mining X, each installment offering the same 50-level structure with minor mechanical additions like portals, decelerators, and accelerators showing up in later entries. The base game here is the stripped-down original, predating those additions. If you play through it and find the pacing agreeable, the sequels do incrementally raise the complexity ceiling, which is at least a coherent progression path. As a standalone purchase, though, this first entry functions more as a demo sampler than a complete product. There is no tutorial to speak of, but the game is simple enough that none is needed. Steam reviews sit at a mixed rating based on a small sample, which tells you about as much as you would expect: some players found the pick-up-and-play loop charming for a quick session, others bounced off the shallowness. No mod support, no multiplayer, no branching difficulty. The achievements are there if badge-hunting is your thing, and Steam Cloud sync means your progress moves between machines without friction, which is about the right level of infrastructure for a game this bite-sized. For strategy and sim players, I want to be honest: this is not in your library's weight class. It is a micro-casual puzzle with a misleading genre listing. If you are looking for a low-effort distraction to run in a second monitor or knock out an achievement or two during a slow afternoon, Data Mining does that without demanding anything from you. Just do not come in expecting depth, replayability, or any of the systems complexity the word 'strategy' normally implies. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7, Vista, 8, 8.1, 10, 11
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0
- Storage
- 200 MB available space
- Graphics
- Intel HD Graphics, AMD Radeon Graphics, NVIDIA GeForce
- Processor
- Intel or AMD 2 GHz
- Sound Card
- Any
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 7, Vista, 8, 8.1, 10, 11
- Memory
- 3 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0
- Storage
- 200 MB available space
- Graphics
- Intel HD Graphics, AMD Radeon Graphics, NVIDIA GeForce
- Processor
- Intel or AMD 2.4 Ghz
- Sound Card
- Any
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Reviews & Ratings
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Game Info
- Developer
- Blender Games
- Publisher
- Blender Games
- Release Date
- Aug 6, 2018







