Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

SpellTower

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
7
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
7
1 Ratings
100
90
80
71
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This


Developer(s)
  
Zach Gage

Genre
  
Puzzle video game


4.4/5
Amazon

Initial release date
  
17 November 2011

SpellTower httpslh5ggphtcomKKQkjBydcYaFBBeXxBP3xisJfW

Platforms
  
Android, iOS, Macintosh operating systems

Modes
  
Single-player video game, Multiplayer video game

Similar
  
Ridiculous Fishing, Puzzlejuice, Solipskier, Super Crate Box, PixelJunk Eden

Spelltower trailer


SpellTower is a 2011 puzzle video game by Zach Gage in which the player creates words from a jumble of letter tiles to clear the screen before it refills. The game has several game modes and a multiplayer battle mode. The impetus for the game—the concept of combining elements from Tetris and Boggle in what was a prototype of the puzzle video game Puzzlejuice—inspired Gage to create SpellTower. The game released for iOS in November 2011 to generally favorable reviews. Versions for OS X and Android followed over the next two years. In 2017 SpellTower Minutes was released. This browser-based Flash game created special "blitz" like modes not found in the mobile releases. A new iOS version released in 2017 swapped out the unnamed dictionary and began using Merriam-Webster's. Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged. French and Dutch language specific versions were also released.

Contents

Gameplay

In the iPad puzzle video game SpellTower, the player attempts to clear the screen of jumbled, lettered tiles by using them to create words. The player can select adjacent and diagonal tiles to create words, which clears those tiles from the screen. If the player creates a long word with five or more tiles, any adjacent tile will be cleared as well. Additionally, difficult characters like X, Q, and J, will remove an entire row when used in a word. Some tiles are blank and can only be cleared by such an adjacent effect.

There are several game modes. In Tower mode, the player has 150 set tiles and tries to remove as many words as possible before running out of options. In Puzzle mode, for each set of tiles removed from the board, another row is added to the screen. The game ends when the tiles fill the screen. While Puzzle mode waits for the player's turn to add more tiles, Rush mode adds new tiles every few seconds. A later update added a multiplayer battle mode, where players can face each other across local Bluetooth connections. In battle mode, each completed word sends tiles to their opponent's screen.

Development

When indie developer Zach Gage was first told about a video game that combined Tetris and Boggle, he had a very specific idea of how the game would play. But after seeing that the prototype of Puzzlejuice played differently, he created—with the developer's permission—the version he imagined as SpellTower. Gage's game eventually released prior to the game that inspired it.

SpellTower released for the iPad tablet computer on November 17, 2011. A month later, Gage added support for iPhone and iPod Touch, and Game Center achievements. In 2012, Gage added local multiplayer support over Bluetooth in a new battle game mode. Gage later released versions for OS X (July 25, 2012) and Android (March 7, 2013). The Android release is identical apart from the omission of word lookup. It also supports local Wi-Fi multiplayer and high score competition via Scoreloop.

Reception

The game received "generally favorable" reviews, according to video game review score aggregator Metacritic. Edge called it a "magnificent ... brainteaser that's nervy, humbling, and strangely energizing". The title was one of TouchArcade's honorable mentions for 2011 game of the year. A year later, TouchArcade said the game remained among the best on the App Store. In 2012, SpellTower was named among IGN's underrated iOS word games.

Edge compared the game's tension to that of Resident Evil's survival horror, though noted that Tower mode was much less tense than the game's Puzzle modes. The reviewer highlighted the role of strategy in both modes, as a small word might fare better than a large word in maintaining the growth of the Puzzle mode tower.

References

SpellTower Wikipedia