Compare Puyo Puyo Tetris prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Sonic Team. Published by SEGA. Released on 2/27/2018. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Casual.

Two iconic falling-block games collide in one surprisingly deep package, and whether you chain Puyos or T-spin Tetriminoes, you'll find more to master here than the cheerful visuals let on.

I went in expecting a novelty cash-in and came out two hours later realising I'd completely forgotten to eat dinner. Puyo Puyo Tetris earns its keep not by slapping two logos together, but by building a genuinely layered set of modes around two puzzle systems that, when you push past the basics, demand very different mental muscles. Tetris is the spatial speed-reader's game: clear horizontal lines with falling Tetriminoes, chain Tetrises back-to-back, and you can drown an opponent in garbage fast. Puyo Puyo asks you to think several moves ahead, matching colored blobs in chains of four-or-more that cascade off the board like a slow-burning fuse you set yourself. Both approaches have a high skill ceiling that most players will never reach, which is the good kind of problem to have. The mode list is the real argument for buying this. Versus pits Puyo against Puyo or Tetris against Tetris in the expected head-to-head format. Swap mode is where things get interesting: your board flips between Puyo and Tetris mid-match at timed intervals, forcing you to keep both skill sets warm at once. Fusion is the chaotic wildcard, dropping both Puyos and Tetriminoes onto the same playfield simultaneously and making you manage the resulting madness. Big Bang mode adds Fever and Lucky Attack mechanics that reward aggression. Party mode throws items onto the field and turns the whole thing into a casual scramble. Solo players get an Adventure mode spanning ten acts of ten stages each, with a story involving an anime cast that is cheerfully nonsensical, and a Lesson mode that actually teaches both systems to newcomers. The cosmetics shop, unlockable character skins, and background swaps give completionists enough to chase. Two caveats worth flagging. The PC port launched in rough shape, though patches have improved stability considerably since launch. The balance conversation around cross-mode Puyo-vs-Tetris matchups has been genuinely contentious in the community: at mid-to-high skill levels, a Tetris player who knows T-spins can apply pressure fast enough to prevent Puyo chains from ever developing, while a Puyo player who lands a big chain can one-shot an opponent before they can respond. Neither side is clearly dominant, but the asymmetry creates a weird experience where matchup knowledge matters as much as raw skill. If you plan to spend time in ranked online play specifically, manage your expectations there. The online player count on PC is modest, which can mean longer queue times or facing experienced opponents early. For solo and casual multiplayer use, none of that is a blocker. The Adventure mode alone gives newcomers a structured ramp-up through every mode variant, and local couch play with up to four people is exactly as chaotic as it sounds. If you grew up playing either franchise, the muscle memory kicks in fast, and learning the other half is a genuinely satisfying side project. This is one of those games that looks like a two-hour novelty and quietly becomes a 30-hour puzzle habit. Alex, Scout Team

Puyo Puyo Tetris
ActionCasual

Puyo Puyo Tetris

Feb 27, 2018Sonic TeamSEGA
GamerScout Says

Two iconic falling-block games collide in one surprisingly deep package, and whether you chain Puyos or T-spin Tetriminoes, you'll find more to master here than the cheerful visuals let on.

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About Puyo Puyo Tetris

I went in expecting a novelty cash-in and came out two hours later realising I'd completely forgotten to eat dinner. Puyo Puyo Tetris earns its keep not by slapping two logos together, but by building a genuinely layered set of modes around two puzzle systems that, when you push past the basics, demand very different mental muscles. Tetris is the spatial speed-reader's game: clear horizontal lines with falling Tetriminoes, chain Tetrises back-to-back, and you can drown an opponent in garbage fast. Puyo Puyo asks you to think several moves ahead, matching colored blobs in chains of four-or-more that cascade off the board like a slow-burning fuse you set yourself. Both approaches have a high skill ceiling that most players will never reach, which is the good kind of problem to have. The mode list is the real argument for buying this. Versus pits Puyo against Puyo or Tetris against Tetris in the expected head-to-head format. Swap mode is where things get interesting: your board flips between Puyo and Tetris mid-match at timed intervals, forcing you to keep both skill sets warm at once. Fusion is the chaotic wildcard, dropping both Puyos and Tetriminoes onto the same playfield simultaneously and making you manage the resulting madness. Big Bang mode adds Fever and Lucky Attack mechanics that reward aggression. Party mode throws items onto the field and turns the whole thing into a casual scramble. Solo players get an Adventure mode spanning ten acts of ten stages each, with a story involving an anime cast that is cheerfully nonsensical, and a Lesson mode that actually teaches both systems to newcomers. The cosmetics shop, unlockable character skins, and background swaps give completionists enough to chase. Two caveats worth flagging. The PC port launched in rough shape, though patches have improved stability considerably since launch. The balance conversation around cross-mode Puyo-vs-Tetris matchups has been genuinely contentious in the community: at mid-to-high skill levels, a Tetris player who knows T-spins can apply pressure fast enough to prevent Puyo chains from ever developing, while a Puyo player who lands a big chain can one-shot an opponent before they can respond. Neither side is clearly dominant, but the asymmetry creates a weird experience where matchup knowledge matters as much as raw skill. If you plan to spend time in ranked online play specifically, manage your expectations there. The online player count on PC is modest, which can mean longer queue times or facing experienced opponents early. For solo and casual multiplayer use, none of that is a blocker. The Adventure mode alone gives newcomers a structured ramp-up through every mode variant, and local couch play with up to four people is exactly as chaotic as it sounds. If you grew up playing either franchise, the muscle memory kicks in fast, and learning the other half is a genuinely satisfying side project. This is one of those games that looks like a two-hour novelty and quietly becomes a 30-hour puzzle habit. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

steamCompetitive PuzzleChain MechanicsSwap ModeLocal MultiplayerCross-Series MashupSkill CeilingAnime Story ModeArcade Modes

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
85%(5,549)

Game Info

Developer
Sonic Team
Publisher
SEGA
Release Date
Feb 27, 2018

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