Reviews

Letterlike review for PC

Platform: PC
Publisher: Puzzlelike
Developer: Puzzlelike
Medium: Digital
Players: 1
Online: No
ESRB: Not Rated

As a devoted word game aficionado, Letterlike seemed like it’d be right up my alley. It’s essentially a roguelike deckbuilder version of Scrabble, where you’re trying to augment your score with multipliers, upgrades, and different bags of letters. Think Balatro, but for word nerds.

Unfortunately, Letterlike doesn’t quite match the highs of Balatro. It certainly makes an effort, though. The basic gameplay is obviously very easy to pick up: if you’ve ever played Scrabble, you’ll know what you’re doing here. You draw seven tiles, you play a word, you try to outscore your opponent – that part is all pretty straightforward.

Where things fall apart is when it gets more complicated than that. While your first couple of opponents are pretty easy, once you get to the third or fourth opponent the game seems to verge on the impossible. You can buy multipliers and extra letter spots, but even with 3x and 4x multipliers, I was still only getting to 5-6,000 points – nowhere near the 10,000 points needed to get to the next round.

Part of the issue, I think, is that Letterlike comes only with the most basic tutorial imaginable. While it tells you how to play words, it skimps on the details when it comes to using multipliers, which means you’re basically on your own while you grind your way to loss after loss after loss.

The other issue is that word games don’t lend themselves to deckbuilder roguelikes in the same way that poker lends itself to a game like Balatro. While there are millions of possible poker hands, the number of winning combinations is much smaller so you can play with a couple of intended outcomes in mind. By contrast, English has hundreds of thousands of words and, at least in Letterlike, it’s a lot harder to aim for something specific – and that’s especially true when you have a massive pool of letters and a limited number of redraws for each game. Case in point, I drew a hand with no vowels, so I was forced to trade a bunch of consonants in – only for me to wind up with a pair of consonants and something like 5 Es, none of which combined to form a word that was longer than two or three letters.

The annoying thing is that Letterlike feels so close to getting it right. There’s a great idea here, and I suspect that with a bit more balancing the game will get there – but at this point, it’s not quite there yet.

Puzzlelike provided us with a Letterlike PC code for review purposes.

Grade: 6.5
Matthew Pollesel

Recent Posts

Mundo Gamer Showcase 2026 broadcast set for June 20th, 2026

Summer gaming events are kicking off all over the place.

10 hours ago

ININ Games addresses R-Type Dimensions III feedback with an improvement initiative and roadmap

ININ and Tozai are taking the mixed reviews very seriously and are throwing extra effort…

11 hours ago

Nintendo shows off even more of the new Star Fox title in the latest trailer

Check out Fox McCloud and the Star Fox squad in a fresh new overview trailer.

11 hours ago

Celebrate Sonic the Hedgehog’s 35th by attending an upcoming Sonic Live In Concert experience

Speed on over to the official site to snatch up some tickets before it kicks…

1 day ago

Tune into Clemmy’s Best Indie Games Summer Showcase tomorrow!

Best Indie Games returns with a fresh seasonal showcase full of indie titles, announcements, news…

1 day ago

Get good with Tekken 8’s Kunimitsu by studying her new starter guide video

The 3rd new Season Pass 3 character has stealthily and stylishly joined the roster beginning…

1 day ago

This website uses cookies.