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Home / Reviews / Apps and Games / Android / App of the week: Snakebird review

App of the week: Snakebird review

Part Snake, part puzzler, all brain-smashingly tricky and brilliant

Subversion is at the heart of Snakebird.

Disarmingly cute cartoon graphics and familiar mechanics make you think the game will be a cinch… shortly before it bludgeons your brain to paté with a meat tenderiser fashioned from your own arrogance and complacency.

The basics are just like Snake, as wrenched through time from an ancient Nokia handset, only with the added snags of gravity and the complication of having to reach an exit once all the fruit’s been munched.

Even with added gravity, this might have been easy – had the puzzles not been designed by a sadist.

Tough old bird

Tough old bird

As your strange worm-like bird awaits your commands, occasionally belching odd noises, you’ll likely scan the current puzzle and quickly start swiping, heading for levitating fruit. And then you’ll die, because a bit of rock was cunningly positioned to make you fail.

So you’ll make use of the undo button, backtrack a bit and try again. Whereupon you’ll die because, clearly, Snakebird is far too clever for you.

The loop during play roughly sounds like this to anyone listening nearby: What about… ? ARGH! Let’s try… ARGH! Hmm, how about… ? ARGH! Only there are usually other choice words replacing the exclamations.

Where it all comes good is when you solve a puzzle, at which point you feel like a genius. Those smart alecs on Mastermind? They’ve got nothing on someone’s who’s cracked level 42 of Snakebird.

Bird brain

Bird brain

So what looks like a game that might brush shoulders with Angry Birds is in fact more like chess hankering to punch your brain in with boxing gloves wrapped around a brick.

And it’s brilliant, from the birds’ grumpy faces and the stupid noises they make to the discoveries you unearth along the way. (It turns out that levitating fruit is surprisingly sturdy, for instance.)

We would, however, recommend playing the game away from polite company, unless you can suffocate regular frustrations and rarer whoops of joy.

Also, you might want to leave the bonus ‘star’ levels until you’re very much alone, unless you’re happy with people seeing you as a crumbled heap on the floor, sobbing and pointing at burping snakebirds on your smartphone.

Snakebird is available for Android and iOS as a free download with a single IAP to unlock beyond the first ten levels. Snakebird is also available on Steam.

Stuff Says…

Score: 5/5

The kind of puzzler that makes you want to hurl your device at the wall, but it remains glued to your fist because it’s just so good.

Good Stuff

Smartly designed puzzles and visuals

Deliciously difficult but never unfair

You always have several unlocked levels to try

Bad Stuff

Fairly likely to drive you round the twist

No cross-device sync

Profile image of Craig Grannell Craig Grannell Contributor

About

I’m a regular contributor to Stuff magazine and Stuff.tv, covering apps, games, Apple kit, Android, Lego, retro gaming and other interesting oddities. I also pen opinion pieces when the editor lets me, getting all serious about accessibility and predicting when sentient AI smart cookware will take over the world, in a terrifying mix of Bake Off and Terminator.

Areas of expertise

Mobile apps and games, Macs, iOS and tvOS devices, Android, retro games, crowdfunding, design, how to fight off an enraged smart saucepan with a massive stick.