Compare Heroes of Hellas Origins: Part One prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Jaibo Games. Published by Alawar Casual. Released on 10/9/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie.

A polished casual match-three with genuine mythological craft behind it, but the ticking clock will stress you out more than the marketing suggests.

I have a soft spot for casual puzzle games that know exactly what they are and commit to it fully, and Heroes of Hellas Origins: Part One sits in that category more comfortably than most. This fifth entry in Jaibo Games' long-running series takes the action underwater, placing you alongside Poseidon to rebuild a sunken kingdom, and the theme gives every board a quiet, shimmering personality that a generic bejeweled clone never earns. The core mechanic is a chain-drawing system built on a hexagonal grid rather than the standard square layout, which immediately opens up more flexible thinking than you might expect walking in. You drag across matching symbols to form chains, and longer chains of five or more trigger coin drops, adding a secondary resource loop that feeds into constructing the underwater world on the hub screen. That world-building element is more than cosmetic: completing it unlocks an additional 18 levels on top of the main 108, so completionists have a real reason to replay boards for higher scores. Four collectible resource types (laurels, flowers, hearts, and coins) keep each level from feeling identical, and obstacles like locked tiles that need god-power to clear add genuine board-reading depth. Here is where I want to be honest with you, though. The three difficulty modes (Relaxed, Normal, and Advanced) sound like a generous difficulty curve, but the ticking clock in Normal mode is tighter than the casual branding implies. Players have noted that you sometimes cannot even make moves while god abilities or key-unlock animations play out, and that dead time eats directly into your clock. It is a real frustration, especially for players who want a meditative pace and chose Normal expecting reasonable breathing room. Relaxed mode sidesteps this entirely and is probably where most players should start. The soundtrack reinforces the mythological atmosphere well, though it loops often enough that extended sessions may have you reaching for the volume slider. For fans of the Heroes of Hellas lineage, there is a note worth raising: some veteran players of the earlier games have found a handful of level designs familiar, feeling recycled from previous entries. If you are brand new to the series this will not register at all, but longtime followers should calibrate expectations. Where Origins: Part One genuinely earns its place is in production finish and pacing structure. The boards escalate obstacle layering steadily, the visual feedback on long chains and power-up triggers is satisfying and legible, and the overall length is well-sized for a casual title you work through in daily sessions rather than marathon runs. This is a game for someone who wants a puzzle to wind down with, not to get wound up by. Approach it in the Relaxed mode, chip away ten levels a night, and the underwater world you are slowly populating becomes a low-key ritual rather than a race. Jaibo Games built something small and careful here, and that craftsmanship shows in the details even when the design occasionally plays it safe. Kai, Scout Team

Heroes of Hellas Origins: Part One
AdventureCasualIndie

Heroes of Hellas Origins: Part One

Oct 9, 2019Jaibo GamesAlawar Casual
GamerScout Says

A polished casual match-three with genuine mythological craft behind it, but the ticking clock will stress you out more than the marketing suggests.

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About Heroes of Hellas Origins: Part One

I have a soft spot for casual puzzle games that know exactly what they are and commit to it fully, and Heroes of Hellas Origins: Part One sits in that category more comfortably than most. This fifth entry in Jaibo Games' long-running series takes the action underwater, placing you alongside Poseidon to rebuild a sunken kingdom, and the theme gives every board a quiet, shimmering personality that a generic bejeweled clone never earns. The core mechanic is a chain-drawing system built on a hexagonal grid rather than the standard square layout, which immediately opens up more flexible thinking than you might expect walking in. You drag across matching symbols to form chains, and longer chains of five or more trigger coin drops, adding a secondary resource loop that feeds into constructing the underwater world on the hub screen. That world-building element is more than cosmetic: completing it unlocks an additional 18 levels on top of the main 108, so completionists have a real reason to replay boards for higher scores. Four collectible resource types (laurels, flowers, hearts, and coins) keep each level from feeling identical, and obstacles like locked tiles that need god-power to clear add genuine board-reading depth. Here is where I want to be honest with you, though. The three difficulty modes (Relaxed, Normal, and Advanced) sound like a generous difficulty curve, but the ticking clock in Normal mode is tighter than the casual branding implies. Players have noted that you sometimes cannot even make moves while god abilities or key-unlock animations play out, and that dead time eats directly into your clock. It is a real frustration, especially for players who want a meditative pace and chose Normal expecting reasonable breathing room. Relaxed mode sidesteps this entirely and is probably where most players should start. The soundtrack reinforces the mythological atmosphere well, though it loops often enough that extended sessions may have you reaching for the volume slider. For fans of the Heroes of Hellas lineage, there is a note worth raising: some veteran players of the earlier games have found a handful of level designs familiar, feeling recycled from previous entries. If you are brand new to the series this will not register at all, but longtime followers should calibrate expectations. Where Origins: Part One genuinely earns its place is in production finish and pacing structure. The boards escalate obstacle layering steadily, the visual feedback on long chains and power-up triggers is satisfying and legible, and the overall length is well-sized for a casual title you work through in daily sessions rather than marathon runs. This is a game for someone who wants a puzzle to wind down with, not to get wound up by. Approach it in the Relaxed mode, chip away ten levels a night, and the underwater world you are slowly populating becomes a low-key ritual rather than a race. Jaibo Games built something small and careful here, and that craftsmanship shows in the details even when the design occasionally plays it safe. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscloud-savestier:sub-5Match-ThreeChain MechanicHexagonal GridWorld-Building LoopGreek MythologyTimed ModeDifficulty OptionsRelaxing Puzzle

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP or later
Memory
1 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
256 MB 3D video card
Processor
1.5 GHz

Recommended

OS
Windows 7 or later
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
512 MB 3D video card
Processor
3 GHZ processor or better

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Game Info

Developer
Jaibo Games
Publisher
Alawar Casual
Release Date
Oct 9, 2019

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What platforms is Heroes of Hellas Origins: Part One available on?

Heroes of Hellas Origins: Part One is available on PC.

When was Heroes of Hellas Origins: Part One released?

Heroes of Hellas Origins: Part One was released on 9 October 2019.

Who developed Heroes of Hellas Origins: Part One?

Heroes of Hellas Origins: Part One was developed by Jaibo Games and published by Alawar Casual.