We all know Kellogg's lovable Tony the Tiger and that beautiful Bengal from Esso ("Put a tiger in your tank"), but you're about to meet another cool cat - and this one has a heck of an arm.
Introducing Bengal: Game of Gods, a new action-puzzle game that borrows heavily from marble-shooters, Zuma and Luxor, but adds a few neat twists to keep players on their toes.
Despite some shortcomings, the game proves you can build on a winning formula.
In Bengal: Game of Gods, you control a striped tiger who must throw a colored ball at a long string of multi-colored balls that snake out onto the screen. The balls follow a specific path, which varies from level to level, and ends inside the mouth of a stone monkey. Your goal is to aim and shoot the ball so that it touches same-colored balls (example: blue with blue); when three or more touch -- one of which must be your ball -- they explode and disappear. The goal is to clear the entire chain before it makes its way into the monkey's mouth.
If you don't want the color held by the tiger (e.g. red), you can swap it with the one on his back (such as green) by simply clicking the right-mouse button. The left-mouse button fires the ball onto the game board.
After every dozen levels or so, the board get increasingly faster and more complex as you travel through the Indian continent.
Bengal: Game of Gods, however, adds a few interesting twists to this tried-and-true formula:
Visually speaking, Bengal: Game of Gods looks slick and colourful; the exotic theme plays well throughout the level architecture, tiger and monkey animations and map screen, not to mention the middle-eastern music fits well, too.
It would be remiss, though, not to mention a few glaring issues with the game. Bengal: Game of Gods only features one game mode; it would have been better to include three or four different game types (each with unique rules) to add to the game's replay factor.
More importantly is an issue with how the next color ball is shown. Because you're looking at the chain instead of your tiger, you are seeing the next ball color out of the corner of your eye. The colored ball you're about to toss onto the screen is only an inch away from the ball that will precede it, so many times I mistakenly thought I was shooting a red ball, for example, because it was queued up on the tiger's back, when in fact it was a yellow ball, which ruined my shot. Compare this to games such as Zuma or Pirate Poppers, where the ball you may swap is much smaller than the one you're firing, so you don't get them confused.
If you can get past these issues, and the fact there are many similar games out there in cyberspace, the extra features found in Bengal: Game of Gods, such as the fun power-ups and a shifting chain, makes it worth playing.
Links:
[1] http://www.gamezebo.com/games/bengal-game-gods
[2] http://www.gamezebo.com/admin/content/widgets_assigner/1745