Conservatively, I’d say that I’ve played a few thousand games of Scrabble in my life. I got hooked on it at a very young age (playing against parents and grandparents who never let me win), and it’s been a constant in my life ever since. Board game version, video game, online, it hasn’t mattered; I’ve just always loved playing it, to the point that it’s probably affected how my brain works. To this day, I can’t look at a license plate without instinctively trying to form words using the available letters.
In other words, I love Scrabble, which means that I greeted the game’s arrival on PS4 and Xbox One with no small amount of excitement…but also a little bit of trepidation. I still remember the complete and utter disaster that was the current-gen version of Monopoly, which means I went into this new version of Scrabble a little worried that it, too had somehow been ruined. It was a vague, shapeless fear, of course (because how can you ruin Scrabble?), but it was still a fear nonetheless — after all, you wouldn’t think Monopoly could be ruined either, but that dreadful Xbox One version showed anything was possible.
Turns out I had nothing to worry about. Scrabble has arrived on the PS4 pretty much exactly as you remember it. There are no crazy bells and whistles, no stupid gimmicks: it’s just you, your opponent, 100 tiles, and a 15×15 board. If you’ve ever played the original version, you’ll have no trouble whatsoever getting used to the PS4 one.
I mean, you can customize things a little, if you so desire. You can play with up to four players, for example, and you can also set time limits for turns and the game as a whole. You can also play against AI that ranges in difficulty from insanely easy (which is actually challenging, since all the Very Easy AI does is put down words that are 2-3 letters in length) to insanely hard (a level of difficulty that’s not for the faint of heart).
That last point is actually crucially important, since if the game has a flaw, it’s that online is completely dead. I tried finding someone to play with multiple times, and I never came across a single other person. Seeing as Scrabble is meant to be a social game — or, at least, a game in which you get to lord your superior vocabulary over other real, live people — not being able to play against anyone else kind of put a damper on my enthusiasm for the game.
It didn’t kill it, though. Not by a longshot. After all, even Scrabble against AI is still Scrabble. It may not be flashy or sexy, but on PS4 — as on everywhere else it’s ever appeared — it’s still outstanding.
I mean it’s more of a “heads on”…but who says that.
The silly things we do for "fandom".
I’m certainly not gonna begrudge cheap PC games…now let’s get some badges and trading cards!
Why can’t any award actually list the innovation in accessibility in their innovation in accessibility…
Finally Jack Black in controller form…what, no? It’s not him? Oh man…
A fight stick without a stick…what a wild time we live in.
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