Publisher: 8floor
Developer: 8floor
Medium: Digital
Players: 1
Online: No
ESRB: E
I have to hand it to 8floor. When they started bringing their casual phone games over to the Vita a few years ago, they were uniformly lousy. Between their ugly mahjohg games, their ugly tower defense games, and their not-ugly (but also incredibly dull) Doodle God/Devil games, they had the market cornered on lazy ports. But lately, theyโve been showing every sign of learning from past mistakes and making games that are worth checking out. First Doodle Kingdom broke the mould from its predecessors and delivered an interesting matching game. Then Medieval Defenders proved itself to be solidly okay. And now theyโve come out with Strike Solitaire, and I have to say: Iโm totally hooked.
I should add one or two provisos before going any further of course. First off, itโs only worth getting if youโre in the mood for something casual on your Vita โ and I have my doubts that there exists a huge overlap in the Venn diagram of โVita ownersโ and โsolitaire loversโ. On top of that, it does feature DLC โ things like wild Joker cards and whatnot โ that make it a little easier to win, which is a little annoying seeing as weโre talking about a $5 card game.
As far as Iโm concerned, however, those are two pretty minor qualifications, that donโt detract from the gameโs overall fun. Yes, you have the option of paying real money to make the game easierโฆbut at the same time, it rewards you pretty well for matching the very cards you need to beat each level, both in terms of coins and โpowerupsโ, and many of the levels are easy enough that itโs possible to rack up coins without even realizing youโre doing it. As casual game DLC goes, itโs pretty inessential.
As for the second point, that itโs a casual game on a platform that probably doesnโt have many casual gamers? Meh. All I know is that Strike Solitaire scratches an itch I never knew I had: to play solitaire on my Vita.
Iโll emphasize, of course, that itโs a solitaire variant, rather than being straight-up solitaire. The โStrikeโ part of Strike Solitaire refers to bowling, which here means that each set of ten layouts is broken into frames rather than hands. You also have to match ten specific cards, and getting those cards ends the frame with a strike.
Honestly, that makes it sound a lot less intuitive and a lot more difficult than it is: basically, you match cards and you clear the board, and thatโs it. If youโve ever played solitaire in your life, youโll be able to pick Strike Solitare up incredibly quickly. Which is only fitting, because if you own a Vita and you like playing solitaire, then itโs definitely a game you should be picking up ASAP.