Pastry Passion

Forgive me if I don’t come across as an expert in this review. Don’t get me wrong; I’ve played plenty of match-three games. And after watching an endless parade of them hit the market, I still enjoy them. It’s just that I do have a life, and therefore haven’t played every single one. So the game play in Pastry Passion might not be unique. I don’t know. But it is fun.

Although the storyline is vague, it seems you’re cast as either a student of the culinary arts working at a bakery or a new employee tasked with learning the ropes. Either way, within moments of loading Pastry Passion, you’ll be swapping cupcakes, chocolate bars and more in an attempt to create matches of at least three items, all of which are laid out on a square grid.

If this was all Pastry Passion had to offer, the game would be in trouble. But that’s not the case. In Patisserie mode, which is the core of the game, customers place orders for a variety of pastries. You collect the ingredients for these treats by creating matches on the grid. Four plates appear beneath the grid showing you which ingredients you need to collect to make a particular indulgence and how many of them it’ll take.

For instance, one plate might contain a cupcake with a five attached to it, a chocolate bar with a three and orange slices with a seven. Once you collect those ingredients, the pastry is automatically created, although you’ve got to click it to wrap it and allow a new plate of ingredients to appear.

Patisserie levels don’t employ a time limit, but you won’t want to take too long to fill the orders you receive because you win or lose these stages based on the number of Quality Stars you collect. It works like this: beneath each plate are four Stars that fill up with color as you gather ingredients. If you don’t fill them fast enough, the Stars slowly empty. When you complete the pastry and click on it, you earn the number of Stars still filled with color. If a level calls for you to collect 48 Stars, you might be asked to make 15 pastries, and must earn your Stars with those orders. If you don’t, you can retry the stage, as there are no lives to lose.

You’ll end up spending the Stars you collect on either “Quality” or “Bonus” tools, all of which are geared to help you win. One of the first Quality tools you’ll be able to buy is the Lucky Star, which generates a random star on the board for you to click and collect. Later, you’ll be able to purchase Quality Chocolate, which increases the numerical value of random chocolate bars (allowing you to collect a single bar that’s actually worth several bars).

Bonus tools do a variety of things, such as collecting the ingredients off different portions of the grid, increasing the quality of your current pastries, refreshing the ingredients on the grid and so on. All you have to do to activate these is click them. You can purchase as many Quality and Bonus tools as you can afford, but you can only use one of each per level.

As you progress through the 60 levels in Patisserie mode, you’ll encounter Exam stages that challenge you to collect the ingredients on a procession of plates before they fall off the end of a conveyor belt. These stages are real nail-biters and give the gameplay a nice adrenaline boost. The second of two modes in Pastry Passion, Arcade, employs a similar mechanic, only it keeps going until you lose.

No pastry is complete without whipped cream and a cherry on top, so to dress up the gameplay, the developers included a trophy room, new ranks as your score goes up and a Score Frenzy mode that you activate by quickly making a lot of matches. Doing this often is a great way of earning a high score.

Like your favorite bakery, there’s a lot to like in Pastry Passion. For starters, the matching action in the Patisserie levels can be as slow or as fast as you like. (The game allows you to continue swapping ingredients even as it’s eliminating those from a previous match and filling the empty spaces.) And the use of increasing Star requirements and ever more powerful tools creates the perfect difficulty curve. Whether or not you like the game’s artistic style will depend on your tastes, but I found the cartoony characters amusing and well drawn.

And like eating the random desserts at a church picnic, you’ll occasionally shrink back while playing Pastry Passion. Although the gameplay is easy to figure out by watching what happens, there’s no explanation in the tutorial or on the help screens as to how Quality Stars work; you’re just told to collect them. And from time to time in Arcade mode, you’ll be asked to gather certain ingredients, but there won’t be enough of them on the grid and no new ones will be added where you can quickly use them. Also, my eyes didn’t care for the levels in which I had to collect chocolate pies and cups of cappuccino, as they looked too similar. Repetition also sets in after a few levels.

These niggles aside, Pastry Passion offers a heaping spoonful of sugary fun. If you can stomach one more match-three game, it’d be a good one to try.

Review by David Laprad
Gamezebo, Inc.

Published in:  on December 15, 2008 at 8:42 am Leave a Comment
Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Jewels of Cleopatra 2: Aztec Mysteries

“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” must have been the mantra while working on Jewels of Cleopatra 2: Aztec Mysteries, a very good but very similar game to its successful predecessor.

It’s a gratifying adventure indeed, but those who paid for the original game – available as a download or on CD-ROM at retail – might feel it’s more of the same despite a few new additions.

Once again players assume the role of the attractive Dr. Felicity Turnstone, who swaps Egypt for Mexico as she begins to uncover ruins from the Aztec Empire. Specifically, she sets out to find jewels worn by an Aztec princess with the help of her friends, including Dr. Shuffle, while also tying to outwit her thieving nemesis, Shady McGrady, who we met in Jewels of Cleopatra.

As with the original game, Jewels of Cleopatra 2: Aztec Mysteries introduces an interesting take on Match-3 games, one of the most popular casual game genres. In order for Felicity to navigate tombs and other areas in her search for treasure, you must swap adjacent jewels so that at least three or more of the same item are aligned horizontally or vertically. When this happens, they turn from stone to gold, allowing our heroine to walk towards another part of the level; a small mini-map at the bottom of the screens shows players where they need to travel to in order to clear the level. Players simply left mouse-click to create a Match-3 and right mouse-click to move Felicity along the path.

If you don’t want to start the level over again, obstacles you’ll need to get past include scorpions, water traps and spider webs, while a number of power-ups can be acquired and used to your advantage, such as one that transforms nine spots on the board into gold, another that lights up dark rooms and a third that blows up unwanted gems for you.

One of the new twists this time around is a dozen mini-games that are spread out throughout each of the 65 maps. Examples of these fun digital diversions that can give you bonus points include an Armadillo Race (whoever gets to the finish first after four laps, wins), Aztec Cups (which is similar the old “shell game”), Toltec Slots (slot machine) and sliding tile-like puzzles; some are better than others but they all serve as a good — albeit short — break from the Match-3 game-play.

Similar to the first game the story is told with entertaining sequences with a little animation, and you’ll unlock more of the tale as you progress throughout the various levels. Will Shady get the jewels before you? The graphics are simply but charming, and the Aztec theme, which runs throughout the entire story and mini-games, is nicely done.

Armchair adventurers who enjoy Match-3 games will no doubt enjoy clicking through the story-heavy Jewels of Cleopatra 2: Aztec Mysteries and it will likely win over players who appreciate the unique adventuring component. But those who bought the original game should first download this sequel’s playable demo to see if there’s enough new content to justify the purchase.

Review by Marc Saltzman
Gamezebo, Inc.