Brain Voyage has a few interesting puzzles and has done a decent enough job with things like the world search for a different puzzle game but there is no tangible reason to stay involved with it. There is a sharing function but other than passing a cou...
Published: 2008-05-23, Author: Sal , review by: gamespy.com
A few entertaining mini-games.
Many puzzles are on the boring side; World Tour format acts as a roadblock to better puzzles.
With the success of puzzle games like Brain Age and Professor Layton and the Curious Village, its only natural that wed soon see a rash of me-too titles for the Nintendo DS. Brain Voyage tries its best to wrap some personality around a set of so-so b...
Abstract: It is one of the more disappointing brain games I have engaged in; nothing too difficult here and unless you absolutely must play every puzzler out there, I would take a pass.
A few of the puzzles are fun and interesting, Teaches you to count sea life, which is a very handy skill.
Claims to have 80 puzzles, but really has 16 with 5 variations each, Most of the puzzles arent any fun, Dr Knizia is just plain weird, Presentation is substandard, Yet another lousy collection of logic puzzles that nobody asked for.
Everything Brain Voyage does has been done better by other logic and puzzle minigame collections. ...
Abstract: The Nintendo DS doesnt need any more below-average collections of brain-training minigames. By extension, that means the Nintendo DS doesnt need Brain Voyage. Its yet another substandard compilation of logic puzzles that fails to do anything new or ...
Abstract: The Brain Age titles made learning fun and quirky, but their arrival and subsequent popularity ushered in a new hellish era of sinister doppelgangers all vying for the same super-saturated market share. There is such a thing as too much of a good thing...