Saturday, July 17, 2010
Where To Buy KEN KEN Electronic Handheld Game
I was given this for Christmas, and am only now finding out that it only costs [...]. I would happily pay double for what I've seen so far. I've spent quite a few hours with it and tried most of the sizes and levels, but once you've got the hang of it, less than 6x6 grid isn't terribly challenging. The gradations are good -- you can work your way up the levels and stay challenged even as you are learning new tricks.
I had no trouble figuring out how to change sizes and levels and have not (yet) bothered to look at the instruction leaflet, so I suspect the thing has a few capabilities that I haven't discovered and/or needed. Haven't yet run out of battery.
My major concern is durability. If the thing lasts a year for [...], I figure it will have been worth it, and I'd raise it to five stars. If it dies tomorrow, I may lower the rating. Yes, the user interface isn't that sexy, but it's much more important to me that it has a large stock of puzzles, which so far I think is the case.
As for the paper vs. electronic issue, I can go either way. (I'm not sure I believed that when I unwrapped the package, but I do now.) I do think one is probably better off learning the game (or at least its mechanics) on paper and then migrating to the electronic version.
Good as a gift for somebody (including yourself!) who's already hooked on the game. Unlike Sudoku, you have to understand some discrete mathematics in order to master it fully. Like Sudoku, it also entails considerable logic as well.Get more detail about KEN KEN Electronic Handheld Game.
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