I need to begin this review by stating that I am assuming that you are
interested in videogame crossword puzzles. There’s not really much here that you
can’t get by buying a crossword puzzle book at a newsstand, so if you’re the pen
(or pencil) and paper type of puzzler you may as well stick with what you
already know and love. Don’t get me wrong, New York Times Crosswords for the DS
is not a bad game at all and I had quite a bit of fun with it while testing it
for this review. The question that you need to ask yourself is that when the
mood to a do crossword puzzle strikes you, would you prefer to grab a book or
power-up your DS?
If you’re open to electronic crosswords then you’ll find that New York Times
Crosswords (NYTC) delivers a thousand puzzles drawn from the famous paper. For
those of you who don’t know, the difficulty of a New York Times crossword puzzle
determines the day of the week on which it will be published. The easiest
puzzles are published on Mondays and the puzzles become progressively harder
during the week, culminating in the deviously challenging Sunday puzzle. NYTC
uses the same system to rank the puzzles’ difficulty levels and its puzzles are
roughly evenly distributed across the seven levels. Now “difficulty” is a
relative term, and nowhere is it more relative than it is when you’re discussing
New York Times puzzles. Monday and Tuesday puzzles will provide plenty of
challenge to novice puzzlers, and younger gamers may find that even these
puzzles are too difficult and frustrating.
The game can be played in a weekly mode in which you must work your way
through a series of puzzles from Monday to Sunday or you can choose to do a
random puzzle. Unfortunately there is no way to select the day of the random
puzzle, so you may have to enter and exit this mode a few times until you find
the day that you’re looking for.
When playing a crossword, the game uses the touchscreen to display the puzzle
grid and the upper screen to display the clues. You navigate the puzzle using
the d-pad and the top screen will automatically display the appropriate clue for
the screen that you’re on – you can flip between across and down clues with the
d-pad as well. Words are entered a letter at a time by drawing the letter into a
square on the touchpad or alternately by tapping the letters out on an optional
keyboard overlay. The handwriting recognition works pretty well, although it
seems to consistently have issues with the letter “E”. The game also supports
three zoon levels on the puzzle, so you can take it all in or concentrate on a
particular corner of the puzzle. The game’s interface works pretty well, but my
main complaint is that you can only look at one clue at a time and you need to
scroll through the puzzle squares to look at each one. I always do crosswords by
first scanning all of the clues and writing in the ones that I can figure out
right away, and then going back to fill in the gaps. This process is more
time-consuming in NYTC than it is with an actual paper crossword.
If you’re the type who likes to know how well you’re doing at the puzzles,
the game will time you on each one. If you get stuck you can even ask the game
to reveal the correct letter in any grid in the puzzle. When you complete the
puzzle it will first check your answers, highlighting any incorrect letters.
Once everything is correct, you’ll be scored based on the difficulty, the time
it took you to complete the puzzle, and the number of hints that you used.
In The End, This Game Hath Been Rated:
80%. If you don’t mind the fact that the game
costs more than a book of crossword puzzles that you can pick up at a newsstand,
you’ll find yourself enjoying this electronic version of the New York Times’
signature puzzle.