Compare Power Brain Trainer prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Serhii Khramov. Published by General Script Studio. Released on 8/20/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie, Simulation, Sports, Strategy.

If your honest use case is 'something low-key to run between meetings', Power Brain Trainer delivers bare-minimum mental calisthenics. Everyone else should look harder.

I put time into Power Brain Trainer looking for something that might scratch the light decision-making itch on a slow afternoon, and what I found was a collection of exercises so thin they barely qualify as a game. The core loop covers memory drills, basic arithmetic, mindfulness prompts, and what the developers call 'learn new' segments. None of these modes have the mechanical scaffolding you would expect even from a decent mobile app. Difficulty sliders exist, which is the most generous thing I can say about the customisation options. The interface looks like it was assembled in a weekend using the oldest UI toolkit available, and one community reviewer described it memorably as feeling like something dated to the mid-1990s. That is not hyperbole. From a depth-of-decision perspective, there is almost nothing here for strategy-adjacent players. There is no progression system with meaningful unlocks, no adaptive difficulty that reads your performance and responds intelligently, and no mod support to speak of. The AI opposition in the logic puzzle sections is non-existent in any interesting sense. Compare this to even a free browser-based arithmetic trainer and the structural gap becomes uncomfortable. The genre tags suggest Simulation and Strategy, but those labels are doing heavy lifting for what amounts to a glorified flash-game wrapper. The free DLC expansions, including Brain Games and Brain Center, do add a handful of classic puzzle formats like Sudoku with multiple difficulty tiers and a sliding-tile variant called Fifteen, which marginally extends the content ceiling, but they cannot paper over the foundation's weaknesses. Where it is not a total write-off is accessibility. Runs on ancient hardware, installs in seconds, and the four-language support (English, Polish, Russian, Ukrainian) means it is genuinely usable across a wider audience than most indie releases at this tier. The difficulty settings let total beginners ease in without friction, and for a parent wanting a calm, screen-time activity for a younger child with zero gaming vocabulary, the low stakes presentation is actually a functional feature rather than a flaw. The 89% positive rating on Steam comes from a very small sample of 28 reviews, so weight that accordingly. The honest read is this: Power Brain Trainer is a product that oversells its category placement. It wears the Strategy and Simulation tags without earning them. There is no decision tree to optimise, no late-game complexity to work toward, and no community building around it. Concurrent player data sits at effectively one person at a time. If what you genuinely want is a low-stimulation, pick-up-and-put-down puzzle toy, it fulfills that narrow brief. If you are expecting anything resembling the mental engagement the title implies, you will be done and disappointed within the first session. Diego, Scout Team

Power Brain Trainer
CasualIndieSimulationSportsStrategy

Power Brain Trainer

Aug 20, 2019Serhii KhramovGeneral Script Studio
GamerScout Says

If your honest use case is 'something low-key to run between meetings', Power Brain Trainer delivers bare-minimum mental calisthenics. Everyone else should look harder.

PC
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About Power Brain Trainer

I put time into Power Brain Trainer looking for something that might scratch the light decision-making itch on a slow afternoon, and what I found was a collection of exercises so thin they barely qualify as a game. The core loop covers memory drills, basic arithmetic, mindfulness prompts, and what the developers call 'learn new' segments. None of these modes have the mechanical scaffolding you would expect even from a decent mobile app. Difficulty sliders exist, which is the most generous thing I can say about the customisation options. The interface looks like it was assembled in a weekend using the oldest UI toolkit available, and one community reviewer described it memorably as feeling like something dated to the mid-1990s. That is not hyperbole. From a depth-of-decision perspective, there is almost nothing here for strategy-adjacent players. There is no progression system with meaningful unlocks, no adaptive difficulty that reads your performance and responds intelligently, and no mod support to speak of. The AI opposition in the logic puzzle sections is non-existent in any interesting sense. Compare this to even a free browser-based arithmetic trainer and the structural gap becomes uncomfortable. The genre tags suggest Simulation and Strategy, but those labels are doing heavy lifting for what amounts to a glorified flash-game wrapper. The free DLC expansions, including Brain Games and Brain Center, do add a handful of classic puzzle formats like Sudoku with multiple difficulty tiers and a sliding-tile variant called Fifteen, which marginally extends the content ceiling, but they cannot paper over the foundation's weaknesses. Where it is not a total write-off is accessibility. Runs on ancient hardware, installs in seconds, and the four-language support (English, Polish, Russian, Ukrainian) means it is genuinely usable across a wider audience than most indie releases at this tier. The difficulty settings let total beginners ease in without friction, and for a parent wanting a calm, screen-time activity for a younger child with zero gaming vocabulary, the low stakes presentation is actually a functional feature rather than a flaw. The 89% positive rating on Steam comes from a very small sample of 28 reviews, so weight that accordingly. The honest read is this: Power Brain Trainer is a product that oversells its category placement. It wears the Strategy and Simulation tags without earning them. There is no decision tree to optimise, no late-game complexity to work toward, and no community building around it. Concurrent player data sits at effectively one person at a time. If what you genuinely want is a low-stimulation, pick-up-and-put-down puzzle toy, it fulfills that narrow brief. If you are expecting anything resembling the mental engagement the title implies, you will be done and disappointed within the first session. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:indieBrain TrainingArithmetic PuzzlesMemory ExercisesMindfulness Mini-GamesAdjustable DifficultyEducation-LitePuzzle CollectionFamily-Accessible

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 or better
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
150 MB available space

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Game Info

Developer
Serhii Khramov
Publisher
General Script Studio
Release Date
Aug 20, 2019

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What platforms is Power Brain Trainer available on?

Power Brain Trainer is available on PC.

When was Power Brain Trainer released?

Power Brain Trainer was released on 20 August 2019.

Who developed Power Brain Trainer?

Power Brain Trainer was developed by Serhii Khramov and published by General Script Studio.