
Elemental Girls
A bite-sized slider puzzle dressed in anime artwork, sitting at the very bottom of the price ladder. Know what you are walking into and it delivers exactly what it promises, nothing more.
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Screenshots & Media

About Elemental Girls
I want to be honest with you about what Elemental Girls is, because the crowd who will enjoy it and the crowd who will bounce off it in under three minutes are very different people. This is a sliding tile puzzle, the same mechanical idea as those little plastic grids you had as a kid where one square is missing and you shuffle pieces around to restore a picture. The picture in question, for each of the ten stages, is an anime-styled illustration of a girl who embodies a natural element: fire, water, air, earth, lightning, and a few others the game keeps as quiet surprises. Zloy Krot Studio made no attempt to reinvent the format, and that is a deliberate choice rather than a failure of imagination. The structure gives you three difficulty tiers across all ten stages. Easy uses a 3x3 grid, normal bumps it to 4x4, and hard asks you to solve a 5x5 arrangement. That scaling is sensible. The 3x3 will feel trivial to anyone who has played this genre before; the 5x5 actually takes a moment of spatial focus, which is where the game earns its modest runtime. Community data puts average playtime somewhere around five hours across all modes, though committed players who know the skip mechanic (pressing H on any puzzle auto-completes it and still unlocks the associated achievement) can burn through the entire achievement list in minutes. That shortcut is more or less advertised in the game itself, so the developer clearly understands the audience: people who want the trading cards, the completion tick, and a look at the artwork gallery, not a punishing brain workout. And the artwork genuinely is the thing worth showing up for. Each illustration has a clean, warm hand-drawn quality to it. The elemental concept gives the artist a consistent thematic palette: cool blues and teals for water, deep crimsons for fire, soft greys and whites for air. The music matches that mood, ambient and unobtrusive, the kind of quiet electronic accompaniment that fades pleasantly into the background during a late-night session. There is a paid artbook DLC and a separate adult content DLC available, neither of which is bundled in by default. The base game itself stays tasteful throughout, for what that is worth to your decision. Where this stumbles is depth. After stage one you have essentially seen every mechanical idea the game has. There are no special tile types, no rotation mechanics, no time pressure, no score multipliers. The difficulty increase between tiers is purely a function of grid size, not design creativity. If you come in hoping for something with the puzzle layering of a Picross or the spatial invention of a Pipe Dream, you will be disappointed fast. This is ambient in a way that some people find meditative and others find empty. I lean toward charitable on that point, because the game costs almost nothing and asks almost nothing of you in return: it is a small, complete thing that knows its own shape. For the trading card collector, the achievement hunter looking for a gentle afternoon checklist, or the player who just wants an undemanding wind-down session with pleasant visuals, Elemental Girls holds up its end of the deal. Go in with any larger expectation and the seams show immediately. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7 32-bit
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 10
- Storage
- 1 GB available space
- Graphics
- 1 Gb
- Processor
- Quad-core Intel or AMD processor, 2 GHz or faster
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 7 32-bit
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 1 GB available space
- Graphics
- 2 Gb
- Processor
- Quad-core Intel or AMD processor, 2.5 GHz or faster
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Reviews & Ratings
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Game Info
- Developer
- Zloy Krot Studio
- Publisher
- IR Studio
- Release Date
- May 15, 2019