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It never tries to be more complicated than it needs to be. The art is clean, the rules are obvious.
Developer: bestgames.com
- 4.6
- Score
You wouldn't think drawing a line on the screen could feel stressful - but give Draw Bridge Challenge five minutes of your time and it'll prove otherwise. The concept sounds laughably simple: draw a bridge so a little car can cross to the other side. That's it. No enemies, no explosions, no time limit. Just a quiet little challenge that gets surprisingly tricky once you realize your wobbly, uneven line is nowhere near strong enough to hold anything. And then the car rolls off and crashes dramatically into the void. Yeah. You'll want another try immediately. The gameplay is exactly what it sounds like: you use your finger (or mouse) to draw a bridge between platforms, and once you're done, a tiny car rolls across whatever disaster you've created. Sometimes it works. A lot of the time it doesn't. The trick is to figure out how to make a slope that isn't too steep, an arc that doesn't collapse in the middle, or a jagged mess that somehow still holds up. There's a nice sense of "try, fail, adjust" built into each level. The physics engine is simple, but consistent - meaning when your bridge falls apart, it's almost always your fault. And that's what makes it addictive. You learn from your previous mess-ups and slowly start to think like a tiny engineer with a marker pen. What I enjoyed most about Draw Bridge Challenge is that it never tries to be more complicated than it needs to be. The art is clean, the rules are obvious, and every level gives you a new excuse to draw something ridiculous and hope it works. Sometimes I'd draw a perfectly arched bridge like I knew what I was doing... and sometimes I'd panic-doodle a staircase and watch in amazement as the car actually made it across. There's a goofy kind of joy in those moments. It's not a deep game, but it's fun, casual, and way more absorbing than I expected. If you're the type who likes messing with physics just to see what breaks - or you just want a game that doesn't demand too much brainpower but still makes you think a little - this one's worth giving a shot.