Compare Highrise Heroes: Word Challenge prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Fallen Tree Games Ltd. Published by Fallen Tree Games Ltd. Released on 1/8/2016. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Indie, Strategy.

Word games on PC rarely earn a second glance from strategy-inclined players. Highrise Heroes earns one, with Boggle-style tile-chaining wrapped around a genuine mystery plot that keeps changing the rules on you.

I went into Highrise Heroes: Word Challenge expecting a shallow mobile port dressed up for Steam, and it kept proving me wrong floor by floor. The core loop is closer to a match-3 gravity puzzler than a simple vocabulary test: you chain adjacent letter tiles across a grid, and clearing words drops the board, pulling story characters down toward safety. That structural hook, words as the physical mechanism of survival rather than just a scoring vehicle, gives the whole thing a satisfying logic that most word games skip entirely. The level design deserves real credit for not letting the formula stagnate. Early stages ease you in with move-count goals and straightforward vocabulary, but the game steadily layers on oxygen meters that drain unless you chain blue tiles, timed challenges where you need to spot long words almost instantly, colour-coded tile restrictions, and math-based number levels that throw the alphabet out entirely. The 64 banana challenges, scattered across the main campaign, add secondary objectives like constructing a six-letter vowel-heavy word within a fixed move budget, giving completionists something to chase beyond the base three-star score. Twelve chimp-themed bonus stages sit on top of all that. The pacing is uneven, some mid-game levels feel noticeably easier than what came two stages before, but the overall difficulty curve lands firmly on the challenging side, particularly in the timed sections where a short clock and a random tile draw can feel genuinely punishing. Character powers add a thin but functional strategy layer. Each survivor you rescue carries a special ability, and spending one typically costs you a move, which on tighter levels is a real trade-off rather than a free button. The story, written by novelist Rosanne Rivers, is surprisingly committed: there are multiple named characters, a stalker subplot, and two distinct endings depending on your choices. It will not replace your CRPG backlog, but it gives the levels narrative stakes that most genre peers do not bother with. The dictionary is the most consistently criticised element across the player base, and the complaints are fair: some common words are missing, a handful of proper nouns are accepted, and the inconsistency stings most when a character ability gets burned on a word the game refuses to recognise. A post-launch update did add the option to disable timed pressure without affecting achievements, which was the right call and shows the developer was listening. Steam Leaderboards and cloud saves are in, which is exactly what a score-attack word game needs. Mod support is non-existent, and there is no multiplayer to speak of, so once you have three-starred everything and hunted the 36 achievements the content bucket is empty. With an average play session around six to seven hours for a straight run, and meaningfully longer if you push for full completion, it is a lean but honest package. The asking price sits well below the impulse-buy threshold for most PC gamers, which does a lot of work to offset the content ceiling. Diego, Scout Team

Highrise Heroes: Word Challenge
AdventureIndieStrategy

Highrise Heroes: Word Challenge

Jan 8, 2016Fallen Tree Games Ltd
GamerScout Says

Word games on PC rarely earn a second glance from strategy-inclined players. Highrise Heroes earns one, with Boggle-style tile-chaining wrapped around a genuine mystery plot that keeps changing the rules on you.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Highrise Heroes: Word Challenge

I went into Highrise Heroes: Word Challenge expecting a shallow mobile port dressed up for Steam, and it kept proving me wrong floor by floor. The core loop is closer to a match-3 gravity puzzler than a simple vocabulary test: you chain adjacent letter tiles across a grid, and clearing words drops the board, pulling story characters down toward safety. That structural hook, words as the physical mechanism of survival rather than just a scoring vehicle, gives the whole thing a satisfying logic that most word games skip entirely. The level design deserves real credit for not letting the formula stagnate. Early stages ease you in with move-count goals and straightforward vocabulary, but the game steadily layers on oxygen meters that drain unless you chain blue tiles, timed challenges where you need to spot long words almost instantly, colour-coded tile restrictions, and math-based number levels that throw the alphabet out entirely. The 64 banana challenges, scattered across the main campaign, add secondary objectives like constructing a six-letter vowel-heavy word within a fixed move budget, giving completionists something to chase beyond the base three-star score. Twelve chimp-themed bonus stages sit on top of all that. The pacing is uneven, some mid-game levels feel noticeably easier than what came two stages before, but the overall difficulty curve lands firmly on the challenging side, particularly in the timed sections where a short clock and a random tile draw can feel genuinely punishing. Character powers add a thin but functional strategy layer. Each survivor you rescue carries a special ability, and spending one typically costs you a move, which on tighter levels is a real trade-off rather than a free button. The story, written by novelist Rosanne Rivers, is surprisingly committed: there are multiple named characters, a stalker subplot, and two distinct endings depending on your choices. It will not replace your CRPG backlog, but it gives the levels narrative stakes that most genre peers do not bother with. The dictionary is the most consistently criticised element across the player base, and the complaints are fair: some common words are missing, a handful of proper nouns are accepted, and the inconsistency stings most when a character ability gets burned on a word the game refuses to recognise. A post-launch update did add the option to disable timed pressure without affecting achievements, which was the right call and shows the developer was listening. Steam Leaderboards and cloud saves are in, which is exactly what a score-attack word game needs. Mod support is non-existent, and there is no multiplayer to speak of, so once you have three-starred everything and hunted the 36 achievements the content bucket is empty. With an average play session around six to seven hours for a straight run, and meaningfully longer if you push for full completion, it is a lean but honest package. The asking price sits well below the impulse-buy threshold for most PC gamers, which does a lot of work to offset the content ceiling. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Word PuzzleTile-ChainingTimed ChallengesBranching EndingsOxygen MechanicScore AttackBanana ChallengesStory-Driven PuzzleCompletion Hunting

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Platinum

Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 4 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows Vista/7/8/10
Memory
1 GB RAM
Storage
100 MB available space
Graphics
OpenGL 3.2 or higher
Processor
1.66 GHz or faster 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) processor

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Game Info

Developer
Fallen Tree Games Ltd
Publisher
Fallen Tree Games Ltd
Release Date
Jan 8, 2016

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What platforms is Highrise Heroes: Word Challenge available on?

Highrise Heroes: Word Challenge is available on PC.

When was Highrise Heroes: Word Challenge released?

Highrise Heroes: Word Challenge was released on 8 January 2016.

Who developed Highrise Heroes: Word Challenge?

Highrise Heroes: Word Challenge was developed by Fallen Tree Games Ltd.