Compare Merri Puzzle prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Merriman Games. Published by SA Industry. Released on 6/22/2017. Available on PC. Genres: Indie, Strategy.

Skip your lunch break Flash game folder and load this instead, only if you genuinely can't live without a physics block-pusher and 50 achievements to chase.

I put my strategy hat on for this one and came out the other side wondering who this is actually competing with. Merri Puzzle is a 2D physics puzzler where your only real levers are gravity and a toolkit of placeable blocks. You drag blocks onto a level to build slides, elevators, or walls, then watch your ball or shape roll, float, or stumble toward a flashing exit. The core loop is readable in under a minute, which is either a feature or a warning sign depending on what you came here for. On paper there is mechanical variety. Lava tiles punish bad routing, exploding blocks shatter on contact, red dynamite bricks wipe the level if your shape touches them inside a time limit, and locked exits require routing a secondary shape to trigger the gate. The game bills over 75 levels in its normal mode, with a harder difficulty layer on top. Some puzzles genuinely ask you to think about energy management: if your shape loses momentum and sits still, you reset, which means block placement has to account for slope angles and nudge opportunities. That is a real physics consideration and the closest the game gets to asking something strategic of the player. The problems are harder to ignore. The visual presentation reads as a mobile prototype rather than a finished PC release. The interface is driven by simple point-and-click tapping with no meaningful customisation depth, and the checkpoint system has been flagged by community members as unreliable when you exit to the main menu mid-run. Player reception from the tiny pool of reviewers on record is not kind: the dominant criticism is that pace feels sluggish and engagement bottoms out fast. There is no mod ecosystem, no multiplayer hook, no tutorial that eases you into the harder mechanics, and zero post-launch content visible from the outside. The achievement list has 50 entries, which is the most generous number in this entire package and the clearest sign this title is positioned as an achievement-farm vehicle. Who is this for, then? Honestly, a very narrow bracket: someone who wants a low-friction, zero-pressure physics toy with something to click toward (the achievements), and who has already exhausted better options in the genre. If you have played Levelhead, any Trine entry, or even the older World of Goo, Merri Puzzle will feel like a significant step backward in production and puzzle sophistication. There is no progression system to speak of, no unlockables beyond level completion, and no community building around it. The physics simulation itself is functional but not interesting enough to carry the experience on its own. Hard mode exists, but reaching it requires tolerating the normal mode first, which the existing player base suggests few people bother to do. Diego, Scout Team

Merri Puzzle
IndieStrategy

Merri Puzzle

Jun 22, 2017Merriman GamesSA Industry
GamerScout Says

Skip your lunch break Flash game folder and load this instead, only if you genuinely can't live without a physics block-pusher and 50 achievements to chase.

PC
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About Merri Puzzle

I put my strategy hat on for this one and came out the other side wondering who this is actually competing with. Merri Puzzle is a 2D physics puzzler where your only real levers are gravity and a toolkit of placeable blocks. You drag blocks onto a level to build slides, elevators, or walls, then watch your ball or shape roll, float, or stumble toward a flashing exit. The core loop is readable in under a minute, which is either a feature or a warning sign depending on what you came here for. On paper there is mechanical variety. Lava tiles punish bad routing, exploding blocks shatter on contact, red dynamite bricks wipe the level if your shape touches them inside a time limit, and locked exits require routing a secondary shape to trigger the gate. The game bills over 75 levels in its normal mode, with a harder difficulty layer on top. Some puzzles genuinely ask you to think about energy management: if your shape loses momentum and sits still, you reset, which means block placement has to account for slope angles and nudge opportunities. That is a real physics consideration and the closest the game gets to asking something strategic of the player. The problems are harder to ignore. The visual presentation reads as a mobile prototype rather than a finished PC release. The interface is driven by simple point-and-click tapping with no meaningful customisation depth, and the checkpoint system has been flagged by community members as unreliable when you exit to the main menu mid-run. Player reception from the tiny pool of reviewers on record is not kind: the dominant criticism is that pace feels sluggish and engagement bottoms out fast. There is no mod ecosystem, no multiplayer hook, no tutorial that eases you into the harder mechanics, and zero post-launch content visible from the outside. The achievement list has 50 entries, which is the most generous number in this entire package and the clearest sign this title is positioned as an achievement-farm vehicle. Who is this for, then? Honestly, a very narrow bracket: someone who wants a low-friction, zero-pressure physics toy with something to click toward (the achievements), and who has already exhausted better options in the genre. If you have played Levelhead, any Trine entry, or even the older World of Goo, Merri Puzzle will feel like a significant step backward in production and puzzle sophistication. There is no progression system to speak of, no unlockables beyond level completion, and no community building around it. The physics simulation itself is functional but not interesting enough to carry the experience on its own. Hard mode exists, but reaching it requires tolerating the normal mode first, which the existing player base suggests few people bother to do. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Physics PuzzlerBlock PlacementAchievement FarmingHard ModeEnergy ManagementLow-FrictionCasual Puzzle

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Unsupported

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 10
Memory
1 GB RAM
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
512mb GFX Memory
Processor
1GHZ or higher

Recommended

OS
Windows 7, Windows 10
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
1gb GFX Memory or higher
Processor
1GHZ or higher

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Merriman Games
Publisher
SA Industry
Release Date
Jun 22, 2017

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How much does Merri Puzzle cost?

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What platforms is Merri Puzzle available on?

Merri Puzzle is available on PC.

When was Merri Puzzle released?

Merri Puzzle was released on 22 June 2017.

Who developed Merri Puzzle?

Merri Puzzle was developed by Merriman Games and published by SA Industry.