Put together the beautiful jigsaws included, or make your own new puzzles from photos or screen captures in Jigsaws Galore!
Overall rating
5/ 5
234 of 261 found this review helpful
Next to being "Live", best Jigsaw puzzle ever!!
PostedJanuary 12, 2012
Nizzy1
fromGarrett, KY
Skill Level:Intermediate
Favorite Genre(s):Hidden Object, Large File
Current Favorite:
Jigsaws Galore
(121)
Fun Factor
4/ 5
Visual/Sound Quality
5/ 5
Level of Challenge
5/ 5
Over the years, I have tried several PC jigsaw puzzle games, but I always return to Jigsaws Galore. It is as near to working on a jigsaw puzzle at your kitchen table or card table as you could get except that you can sit comfortably in your chair, you can eat your bowl of ice cream without worrying about drips or stickiness, and you are safe from accidents that scatter your puzzle pieces from here to Kingdom come. You can rotate your pieces, even select the size and shape of your pieces. I like to start my puzzles by putting the straight outside edges together first. There is a special tray for this purpose and it is easy to select your edges in groups and then drop them in trays. If you have a special picture you think would make a great puzzle, this program allows for that. These are just a few of the options available that make this game far and above any other jigsaw game I've ever seen. I hope you enjoy it as much as I do.
I recommend this game!
+207points
234of261voted this as helpful.
Death at Fairing Point: A Dana Knightstone Novel Collector's Edition
While on vacation, you are haunted by the ghost of a poor painter in love with a rich heiress – who was killed at Fairing Point!
Overall rating
4/ 5
23 of 23 found this review helpful
Death at Fairing Point
PostedNovember 25, 2011
Nizzy1
fromLouisville, KY
Skill Level:Intermediate
Favorite Genre(s):Hidden Object, Large File
Current Favorite:
Samantha Swift and the Hidden Roses of Athena
(15)
Fun Factor
4/ 5
Visual/Sound Quality
4/ 5
Level of Challenge
5/ 5
Like all of Dana Knightstone's Novel games, I quite enjoy them. They present enough of a challenge that I can't just skip through them. There is a decent storyline through each game. While I have seen reviews attesting dislike at the out-loud thinking of the hero, I find human utterances make the game more "liveable", not just a silent screen play.
Be sure to play Tuscan Skies CE, a Dana Knightstone Novel game.