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Pogo Island review (DS)

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Those already committed to the games from Pogo.com on offer here might appreciate this portable package, though it still feels a little lean.

EA's Pogo.com has been a major player in the casual-social games scene on the PC for years, and a little slice of that success is now available on the Nintendo DS with Pogo Island. This five-game collection includes a few games that can be played for free at Pogo.com, as well as several available only to subscribers of the premium Club Pogo service. For your $29.99, you get Poppit!, Word Whomp, Phlinx, Tri-Peaks Solitaire, and Squelchies, as well as a simple story mode and some limited multiplayer abilities. It's a good cross section of the types of games offered by the Web site, and the ability to transfer tokens won in Pogo Island to a Pogo.com account will likely appeal to those already enamored with the service. Based on what you get for the price, though, the games are neither numerous enough nor consistent enough in quality.

Poppit! is as close to a marquee game as Pogo.com has, and it translates to the DS nicely. You're presented with a field of multicolored balloons, with the goal being to clear out as many as possible. You can tap the balloons with the stylus to pop them, but balloons can only be popped when they're touching at least one other balloon of the same color. As you pop balloons, the remaining balloons will rise and shift to fill in the gaps. The strategy quickly becomes not just locating clusters of balloons to pop, but also setting up additional clusters by anticipating what the field will look like after you pop some balloons. Poppit! isn't a particularly taxing puzzle game, nor is it inherently addictive. About the nicest thing you can say about it is that it's pleasant.

Word Whomp is a simple word jumble game. You're randomly given six letters and a limited amount of time to form as many three-or-more-letter words out of them as you can. Fans of board-game staples like Scrabble and Boggle will find that Word Whomp scratches much the same itch, and it's an easy game to loose track of the time with. What hurts Word Whomp is its finicky vocabulary. Since Pogo Island is rated E for Everyone, it doesn't recognize anything that's even remotely racy. There are also plenty of E-rated, Merriam-Webster Abridged words that don't register, yet the game will randomly accept abbreviations and acronyms. It's too bad that these inconsistencies have to crop up, because at its core, Word Whomp is one of Pogo Island's more appealing games.

Tri-Peaks Solitaire is essentially still just solitaire, though with a few unique twists. You're presented with a field of playing cards arranged into three pyramids, all of which are face down, except for the bottom row. You're also given one face-up card in your hand, and you can pull any of the exposed cards from the pyramids and place them in your hand, so long as the card is either one number higher or lower than the card currently in your hand. It may sound rather impenetrable, but it's actually a pretty fun and smart variation on a well-known card game, and it's easy to knock out a game in just a few minutes.

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Quick Specifications

  • Release date01/23/07
  • ESRB Everyone
  • Developer EA Canada
  • Genre Action
  • Elements Miscellaneous - kids / children's games & entertainment
  • Number of players 1-2 Players
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