Hex Frvr

Hex Frvr (stylized Hex FRVR) is a puzzle video game released in 2015, created by indie developer Chris Benjaminsen. The player is given an empty hexagon-shaped board, and must strategically place pieces on it to fill in lines of tiles. It started as a test, but unexpectedly went viral after Benjaminsen released it.

Hex Frvr
Developer(s)Chris Benjaminsen
Platform(s)Browser, iOS, Android
Release2015
Genre(s)Tile-matching video game
Mode(s)Single-player

Gameplay

The player can choose one of three pieces to add onto an empty board at a time, made up of several small tiles. Linking tiles in a line from one edge of the board to another will remove all the tiles in the completed line, and finishing several lines at once will create a combo for extra points.[1] The game ends when the player can no longer place anymore tiles.[2]

Development

Hex Frvr was created by Chris Benjaminsen as a way to test his HTML5 skills. His first game was a version of solitaire, so he "wanted something different."[3] The game was based on a minigame in Second Life.[2] According to Chris Benjaminsen, "Quite a lot of my friends started losing sleep to the game, which is a pretty good indicator that you have a success on your hands." He also commented that "the game got even more addictive when sounds and music were added to the game".[1] The game was released on Facebook and web browsers in August 2015, with the mobile versions releasing 4 October of the same year.[1]

Reception

When the game's creator Chris Benjaminsen promoted the game on Reddit, it got over 1,500 comments and started to go viral.[3] According to Benjaminsen, the Reddit post was "definitely what made the game explode. While I have been successful with distribution before, I have never done anything like this."[1] After five days of being released, Chris Benjaminsen revealed that "players have spent just above 4 full years (1,598 days) playing the game".[3]

Tom Senior wrote an article for PC Gamer titled "Hex FRVR: the perfect procrastination puzzle game", stating "It's so quick and simple that I can't stop playing it."[2] The game has been noted by many players to be addictive.[1]

References

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