
QbQbQb
Tetris-on-a-planet with a soundtrack that genuinely evolves as you play. Solo or couch co-op, built by one person, small price, zero filler.
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About QbQbQb
I have a soft spot for Ludum Dare survivors, and QbQbQb is one of the better ones to make it all the way to a polished Steam release. Rezoner, a one-person operation, took a jam-born concept and filed it down into something genuinely tight: you spin a tiny planet, colored blocks rain in from the void, and you match them into groups of three before the stacks breach the planet's atmosphere and cost you a life. That description sounds modest. The execution is not. The rotation mechanic is what separates this from a standard match-three. You are not dragging tiles on a grid; you are orbiting a world, reading angles, and making split-second decisions about where the next block will land relative to the ones already down. On the standard mode you are grouping triplicates; on the harder setting you are matching colors on polar opposites of the planet simultaneously. The difficulty ramp is honest. Early rounds feel meditative, almost slow. Then, every hundred points, the music shifts up a gear and the blocks arrive faster. The transition from calm to controlled panic is not a jolt, it is a gradient, and that gradient is exactly what makes one more run feel reasonable every single time. The soundtrack deserves its own paragraph. Each planet carries an original electronic track, and the composition is built in layers that unlock as your score climbs. What starts as a sparse, floaty opener builds toward something genuinely propulsive, and the feedback loop between the audio and the gameplay creates the kind of light trance state that good arcade games live or die by. Rezoner composed and developed the whole thing, and that unified authorship shows in how the sound and the visuals talk to each other. The art is minimalist, almost austere, but when combo chains fire off, the screen quietly blooms with small flourishes that feel earned rather than decorative. The co-op mode is a thoughtful addition rather than an afterthought. In solo play you rotate the whole planet; in two-player, each person controls their own blocks independently on the same world, which changes the spatial reasoning almost entirely. It works on a single keyboard (WASD versus arrow keys) or two gamepads, and the game also includes color-blind support, which is a small but meaningful detail that solo indie games often skip. There are six Steam achievements and a handful of unlockable planets, so the loop has just enough structure to give completionists something to chase without pretending to be a longer game than it is. If there is a genuine criticism, it is that the content ceiling arrives fairly quickly for solo players pushing past the early planets. This is an arcade game in the truest sense: the replay value is in the score chase and the sensory loop, not in mechanical discovery. If you need unlockable classes or branching progression, look elsewhere. But if you respect a small game that understands exactly what it is and executes that thing with care, QbQbQb earns its place on any short-session playlist. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- XP
- Memory
- 1024 MB RAM
- Storage
- 100 MB available space
- Processor
- Pentium 4
Recommended
- OS
- XP
- Memory
- 2048 MB RAM
- Storage
- 100 MB available space
- Processor
- Core 2 Duo
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Game Info
- Developer
- Rezoner
- Publisher
- Rezoner
- Release Date
- Oct 29, 2014