The Tiny Bang Story

 Review

Common Sense Media says

One of the most original (and hard) seek-and-find puzzlers.
greenON: Content is age-appropriate for kids this age.
yellowPAUSE: Know your child; some content
may not be right for some kids.
redOFF: Not age-appropriate for kids this age.
not for kidsNOT FOR KIDS: Not appropriate for kids any age.

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Quality
 
Sometimes media can be age appropriate but a real waste of time. Our star rating assesses the media's overall quality.

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Parents say

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Kids say

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What parents need to know

Parents need to know that The Tiny Bang Story is a downloadable hidden object and puzzle game for Windows and Mac computers, and that it is free of mature content. Players examine colorful pictures of a fascinating fantasy world in order to figure out what they need to do. However, its high level of difficulty and sometimes less-than-helpful hint system may frustrate younger players who find themselves stuck for extended periods.

  • This game hasn’t any sort of overt agenda, but it does intimate that patience and perseverance are valuable allies when it comes to problem-solving. 
  • This game has no speaking characters, and the player has no avatar. The few people who do appear simply sit in chairs and convey their ideas via pictographic thought bubbles that illustrate tasks players should try to accomplish.
  • The controls are simple -- players simply point and click on interesting objects, puzzle elements, and items they need to collect -- but the puzzles can be tricky and the items that you seek devilishly hard to find. The game’s hint system helps with puzzles, but offers no aid in finding hidden objects. More than once we were forced to consult online guides to find well concealed items.
  • Not applicable.
  • Not applicable.

What's it about?

A small but beautiful little world must be pieced back together again after a meteor shatters it in THE TINY BANG STORY, a downloadable game for PCs and Macs that mixes seek-and-find scenes with about 20 brain-teasing puzzles. Players begin by examining fantastical environments composed mostly of larger-than-life objects like teapots, wine bottles, and boots that have been turned into functional buildings by tiny folk. You click on suspicious looking objects -- hatches, broken panels, levers -- to reveal puzzles, new areas, and groups of objects that you need to find in order to complete tasks. The experience is broken into groups of multiple scenes and puzzles, each culminating with a trip back into outer space where you find appropriate places for the pieces you’ve found in a sprawling jigsaw puzzle of the planet.


Is it any good?

 

Hidden object games have a reputation for being a bit monotonous, but The Tiny Bang Story provides enough originality and diversity to prove thoroughly compelling from start to finish. Its captivating hand-drawn pictures and animations make the game’s lack of text storytelling seem like a clever narrative decision rather than a weakness. And that you must figure out for yourselves what you must search for in order to complete tasks rather than being spoon-fed a list of hidden objects makes your eventual success all the more satisfying.

The only downside is the hint system, which does a good job of providing assistance in most of the contextual puzzles, but is of no help when looking for hidden objects. Cleverly concealed items like wheels and balls can be devilishly difficult to find, and since objects are scattered across many scenes in a group, sometimes you don’t know if you’re even searching in the right picture. This one blip aside, The Tiny Bang Story stands out as one of the prettiest and most original little seek-and-find puzzlers in recent memory.


What families can talk about

  • Families can talk about the importance of patience and perseverance when attempting to discern the solutions to problems, both in games and the real world. Do you find you get frustrated when answers prove elusive? Have you tried taking a break and returning with fresh eyes? Do you think it’s okay to ask friends and family for help?

  • Families can also discuss how it feels to solve problems. Do you feel satisfaction, relief, or both? If satisfaction, does this feeling of gratification make you want to try to solve more problems? How do you feel if a problem ends up getting the best of you?


This review was written by Chad Sapieha

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This review was written by Chad Sapieha
Topics:magic and fantasy
Platforms:Windows, Mac
Available online?Not available online
Genre:Puzzle
Developer:Colibri Games
Release date:May 2, 2011
Price:$9.99
ESRB rating:NR for Not Rated

This review was written by Chad Sapieha
 

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About our rating system
ON: Content is age-appropriate for kids this age.
PAUSE: Know your child; some content may not be right for some kids.
OFF: Not age-appropriate for kids this age.
Learning ratings
BEST: Really engaging, great learning approach.
GOOD: Pretty engaging, good learning approach.
FAIR: Somewhat engaging, OK learning approach.
NOT FOR LEARNING: Not recommended for learning.

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