
Zen Chess: Blindfold Masters
Forcing yourself to hold an entire chess board in your head is one of the most demanding mental exercises in the game - this stripped-back puzzle set makes that training accessible, but its shallow scope and mixed puzzle quality cap the ceiling fast.
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About Zen Chess: Blindfold Masters
I respect what Minimol Games set out to do here, because blindfold visualization is genuinely one of the highest-leverage skills a serious chess player can train. The loop is simple and honest: a position loads on screen, you study it, you hit play, the pieces vanish, and then you execute your solution on an empty board from memory alone. That core mechanic is sound. For anyone who has spent time grinding tactics on Lichess and wondered why they still miscalculate in sharp positions, the answer is often board visualization - and this is one of the few Steam titles that isolates that muscle specifically. The puzzle set runs 150 problems, scaling from mate-in-one positions up to mate-in-four. The early puzzles function as a decent on-ramp: one or two pieces to track, clean forcing lines, low cognitive load. The mate-in-three and mate-in-four puzzles are where things get legitimately demanding, because holding the updated piece positions after each invisible move requires active mental reconstruction rather than passive pattern recall. That difficulty curve is the game's strongest design argument. The minimalist board aesthetic keeps distractions out of the way, and the series' ambient soundtrack does real work keeping the session calm rather than stressful. Here is where the honest problems surface. The opponent move quality in some puzzles has drawn criticism from players who know their chess - positions where black passes up obviously correct defensive responses, making the puzzle feel less like a legitimate tactical exercise and more like a scripted sequence. If you play at any serious club level, you will notice it. The game also carries no tutorial for the blindfold mechanic itself, which is a missed opportunity given how unintuitive the experience is for first-timers. There is no hint system, no move-by-move feedback, and no progression tracking beyond Steam achievements. The content is also finite in a way that matters: average completion times sit under ninety minutes for players who move efficiently, which puts the replay ceiling very low once you have cleared the puzzle list. For total newcomers to blindfold practice, this is a low-friction entry point with a clear premise and a calm atmosphere. For intermediate players who want structured visualization training, the puzzle quality inconsistency is a real friction point. There is no mod support, no community puzzle editor, and no difficulty filter - you work through the set in order or you do not. Compared to free browser tools or more fully featured chess training platforms, the value proposition depends almost entirely on the asking price and your preference for a dedicated Steam application over a browser tab. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows XP/Vista/7/8
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0c
- Storage
- 160 MB available space
- Graphics
- Graphics card supporting DirectX 9.0c
- Processor
- 2 Ghz Dual Core
- Sound Card
- Any
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Game Info
- Developer
- Minimol Games
- Publisher
- Minimol Games
- Release Date
- Oct 1, 2019







