pauraque: Guybrush writing in his journal adrift on the sea in a bumper car (monkey island adrift)
Wrapping up Edutainment Month, I played Engare, a puzzle game about the beauty of geometry. This is a case where static screenshots do nothing to convey what the game is, so here's the gameplay trailer:



In each puzzle, you're presented with one or more moving objects. When you click a spot on an object, a line is drawn that gets dragged along by the continuous motion. The goal is to draw a line that matches the shape at the top of the screen. As you progress through the puzzles, the motion gets more complex, and predicting where your lines will go gets more challenging.

In creating the game, Iranian developer Mahdi Bahrami took inspiration from traditional Persian art, mathematics, and architecture. (The 13th century polymath Nasir al-Din al-Tusi is thanked in the credits.) The elegant design, lovely music, and delightful geometric surprises make it a joy to play. The complete set of puzzles takes only a couple of hours to play through, but after you're done a sandbox mode is unlocked where you can play with various setups and create your own geometric art. For those of us who grew up with Spirograph, some of this will be familiar, but a much wider variety of designs is possible.

Engare is available directly from the developer or on Steam for $9.99 USD. Highly recommended if it looks like something you'd be into!

July 2026

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