If you are looking for an easy and pansy puzzle game, then this is the wrong place to search for it. Aargon is more difficult than the usual game on offer in the puzzle genre, but as difficult also means challenging, it packs quite a punch.
The main aim in Aargon is to make the coins spin. How to make them spin is the complicated part. We have to use a variety of mirrors, prisms and refractors to change the orientation of a laser beam which in turn will touch the coins and make them spin. We can rotate the pieces by using the rotate buttons, and move them by touching and dragging them from the tray on the left to anywhere on the screen. We need to remember though that we can rotate only the yellow and not the blue pieces.
The game play and the all the pieces have been described in detail in the Help button, but it was much easier for me to play and figure it out myself. Sometimes nothing works as well as practice.
Aargon has 80 levels of intense game play to keep us hooked on it. The levels get progressively harder with more game pieces joining in the scene. Splitters, refractors, double mirrors, prisms – it all makes for some colorful and interesting game play.
The graphics serve the game purpose of the game quite well, though it may not be its strongest point. I did not particularly like the music too, but we have the option to play our own music, so no problem there.
A level is completed when all the coins are spinning. And all the coins spin when the laser color matches the coins color. If it sounds confusing, there is no need to fret. A few minutes into the game, and you will discover just how intriguing it is. Aargon is definitely a thinking man’s game, and all puzzle lovers should get their hands on this one.












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