Compare Star Swapper prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Titanite Games S.A.. Published by Titanite Games S.A.. Released on 4/17/2018. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Casual, Indie.

Quiet, patient, and surprisingly tricky: a sliding-tile puzzler that wraps 98 constellation challenges in a minimalist space aesthetic that rewards careful planning over frantic clicking.

I have a soft spot for the kind of game that asks almost nothing of you at first glance and then quietly makes you sit with a puzzle for ten minutes longer than you expected. Star Swapper is exactly that. It lands somewhere between a classical sliding-tile puzzle and a logic game dressed up in starlight, and if that description sounds niche, it is, but intentionally so. The core mechanic is straightforward in the best way. Each level presents a grid of stars labeled with Greek letters, and your job is to slide them along fixed tracks until they snap into the shape of a real astronomical constellation. Single-line tracks restrict movement in one direction; double-line tracks allow back-and-forth. You click a star, click an adjacent empty space, and repeat until Orion or Cassiopeia materialises out of the chaos. That simplicity is the point. What keeps it honest is the layer of space mechanics the game layers in as chapters progress: Wormholes that teleport pieces across the board and Red Giants that act as obstacles or anchors change the texture of the puzzles meaningfully without ever overloading the interface. Ninety-eight levels across a chapter structure gives the thing real staying power, and the score system, built around move count and completion time, adds a quiet reason to replay stages you thought you had finished. The scoring's timer element is the one genuine friction point worth flagging. For a game built around calm deliberation, a ticking clock sitting in your peripheral vision feels like someone tapping a foot while you think. It doesn't break anything, and you can mentally tune it out on a first pass, but it sits awkwardly against the otherwise meditative atmosphere. The soundtrack helps compensate: ambient, spacious, the kind of music that fills the room without announcing itself. The visual design is minimalist to the point of being almost architectural, stars and lines on dark space, and it wears that restraint well. Nothing here is trying to impress you. It's just trying to be calm and considered, which is rarer than it sounds. Who is this actually for? Puzzle fans who want something that respects their time in small doses will find Star Swapper fits naturally into a commute or a wind-down session. It does not hold your hand beyond an accessible tutorial, and the later puzzles with Wormhole mechanics can demand genuine spatial reasoning. If you bounced off pure match-three games for feeling brainless but also find yourself too mentally spent for a demanding logic puzzler, this sits usefully in between. There is no story to follow, no narrative reward at the chapter ends. The payoff is the constellation forming correctly on screen, and for the right player, that quiet click of completion is enough. Kai, Scout Team

Star Swapper
CasualIndie

Star Swapper

Apr 17, 2018Titanite Games S.A.
GamerScout Says

Quiet, patient, and surprisingly tricky: a sliding-tile puzzler that wraps 98 constellation challenges in a minimalist space aesthetic that rewards careful planning over frantic clicking.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Star Swapper

I have a soft spot for the kind of game that asks almost nothing of you at first glance and then quietly makes you sit with a puzzle for ten minutes longer than you expected. Star Swapper is exactly that. It lands somewhere between a classical sliding-tile puzzle and a logic game dressed up in starlight, and if that description sounds niche, it is, but intentionally so. The core mechanic is straightforward in the best way. Each level presents a grid of stars labeled with Greek letters, and your job is to slide them along fixed tracks until they snap into the shape of a real astronomical constellation. Single-line tracks restrict movement in one direction; double-line tracks allow back-and-forth. You click a star, click an adjacent empty space, and repeat until Orion or Cassiopeia materialises out of the chaos. That simplicity is the point. What keeps it honest is the layer of space mechanics the game layers in as chapters progress: Wormholes that teleport pieces across the board and Red Giants that act as obstacles or anchors change the texture of the puzzles meaningfully without ever overloading the interface. Ninety-eight levels across a chapter structure gives the thing real staying power, and the score system, built around move count and completion time, adds a quiet reason to replay stages you thought you had finished. The scoring's timer element is the one genuine friction point worth flagging. For a game built around calm deliberation, a ticking clock sitting in your peripheral vision feels like someone tapping a foot while you think. It doesn't break anything, and you can mentally tune it out on a first pass, but it sits awkwardly against the otherwise meditative atmosphere. The soundtrack helps compensate: ambient, spacious, the kind of music that fills the room without announcing itself. The visual design is minimalist to the point of being almost architectural, stars and lines on dark space, and it wears that restraint well. Nothing here is trying to impress you. It's just trying to be calm and considered, which is rarer than it sounds. Who is this actually for? Puzzle fans who want something that respects their time in small doses will find Star Swapper fits naturally into a commute or a wind-down session. It does not hold your hand beyond an accessible tutorial, and the later puzzles with Wormhole mechanics can demand genuine spatial reasoning. If you bounced off pure match-three games for feeling brainless but also find yourself too mentally spent for a demanding logic puzzler, this sits usefully in between. There is no story to follow, no narrative reward at the chapter ends. The payoff is the constellation forming correctly on screen, and for the right player, that quiet click of completion is enough. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscloud-savestier:sub-5Sliding-Tile PuzzleConstellation ThemeScore AttackWormhole MechanicsShort SessionsMouse-Only ControlsLogic Puzzle

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Microsoft® Windows® XP / Vista / 7 / 10
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
Graphics Card made within the last 4 years
Processor
1.8GHz or faster

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Game Info

Developer
Titanite Games S.A.
Publisher
Titanite Games S.A.
Release Date
Apr 17, 2018

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Where can I buy Star Swapper cheapest?

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What platforms is Star Swapper available on?

Star Swapper is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Star Swapper released?

Star Swapper was released on 17 April 2018.

Who developed Star Swapper?

Star Swapper was developed by Titanite Games S.A..