GameSpot editors' review
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CNET editors' rating:
stars
Very good
Detailed editors' rating
- Reviewed on: 10/19/2007
- Released on: 10/15/2007
- Originally published on GameSpot: Flash Focus: Vision Training in Minutes a Day (DS) Review
OK, so between the Brain Age games and Big Brain Academy, your mind is super sharp. Your noggin can cut glass, but what about your vision? It's probably a total mess. That's probably why Nintendo and Namco have teamed up to take the Brain Age concept to a new series of minigames with a focus on hand-eye coordination, as well as other visual concepts, with the release of Flash Focus. OK, so the science is probably just as shaky as it was in Brain Age, but either way, this collection of quick and easy minigames is still pretty good.

We have it on good authority that the final challenge in this game teaches you how to fire lasers out of your eyes. Don't tell anyone we told you.
Like Brain Age, the game is broken up into a couple of different modes. The Eye Age Check gives you a series of random tests and, depending on how you do, assigns your eyes an age. The younger your eyes are, the better. The random tests are taken from the longer list of training exercises, which are broken up into core games and sports games. The core has you playing a shell game as you try to follow a box with a circle hidden under it while it swaps around with two empty boxes, among other things. The sports games are a little more involved than the typical minigame you'd find in a game like this, and they look a bit better too. Boxing is a training game, where a trainer holds out pads for you to tap with the DS stylus. Baseball has you tap the screen to hit a ball, but you have to tap at the right time to get a good, clean hit. Basketball slides players into frame and quickly turns them into black silhouettes. You must keep track of which players were wearing your team's colors and tap the friendly players. It's all fairly fast-paced, and once you master one game, a harder version of it unlocks. There are plenty of games to play too, but you'll have to keep coming back and training every day to unlock most of them. While it's more twitchy and less mind-empowering than the stuff in the Brain Age games, it's still a fun collection.
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