Perfetto
Jacob Jones | Apr 17, 2010 Education, Games

Exercise your brain and raise your stress levels at the same time!!
Welcome to Perfetto! Chances are you’ve probably played this game in your childhood as it is a direct copy of the legendary game Perfection by Milton Bradley. The object of this game is to place all the yellow pieces into their respective slots before the red timer runs out. As a kid, playing perfection was five times more scary than it was fun. I’d always freak out and jump when the timer ran out and the pieces all flew out. After a week of messing around with it I shoved into my closet and never touched the thing again until I was in middle school. Luckily, when your minute runs out it doesn’t pop up into your face like the original game did. Instead, the pieces float up magically and the board resets itself.
Yes. The board resets itself! And you the player get to experience the mind numbing frustration of putting all the pieces back into place! You’ll never have the same game board when you play. Pretty nifty, eh? This makes a somewhat boring a game a bit more fun. Then again, memory games like Perffecto by GoodAppl are difficult to get into when you have a short attention span like me.
While the game play itself gets boring after a few minutes, I must admit I did feel a tad bit smarter when I get done playing. My only complaint is that while the game gives you a score at the end of your round, it fails to give me a menu button to check out my high score board. In fact, this game doesn’t have a menu at all. It’s just the game. This takes a lot of fun out of having a high score when you can’t gloat in the aftermath of beating your previous high score. Hopefully, in the next update they’ll fix this little problem.
- The almighty Perfetto!
- It would be cool if this game could reset the clocks automatically.
- My crappy high score!
- There's only so many ways to show this game... so here's a side view!
Version 1.0
Reviewed on iPhone 3G 3.1.3
Tags: $.99, Games, good for kids, Jacob Jones, puzzle, traditional



(4.80 out of 5)