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Zen Puzzle Garden

Simple Complexity in a Austere Puzzle Game

The best puzzle games take a handful of elements, and then surprise you with the complexity of puzzles those simple elements can create. Lexaloffle, the creators of this game (as well as Chocolate Castle) is something of a master of the genre, as Zen Puzzle Garden shows.

In Zen Puzzle Garden, you play a Buddhist monk who, in each level, has to rake the sand of a rock garden. The garden itself is a rectangle divided into squares; some are occupied by immovable rocks. You position yourself at one point around the garden, and rake across it--all the way to the other side, unless you are stopped by a rock. If so, you can then rake at a right angle from your previous direction of motion. To solve the puzzle, all open squares must be raked--but you can never re-enter an already-raked square.

Zork I: The Great Underground Empire

The Zork games are seminal influences on many games to follow, and are the examplars par excellence of the heydey of the text adventure. Purely text in nature, they cast doubt on the very term "video game" -- nothing "video" about them. A description is presented to you; you type in your response (and hope that the parser understands you), grab items, and combine them to solve puzzles. Though derivative of earlier academic games like Crowther's Colossal Cave, they added an element of humor and a puzzle complexity that modern games rarely aspire to.