Hex Park

Hex Park

Webnetic s. r. o. December 5, 2025
PS4PS5Puzzle
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About Hex Park

Hex Park is a puzzle game by Webnetic s. r. o. set in a hex-grid world where you rotate arrow tiles to guide directions and clear obstacles. It launched December 5, 2025, for PlayStation 4 and 5. The single-player campaign has 150 handcrafted levels with mechanics like keys, bombs, and ice counters. Multiplayer modes let you compete or collaborate on puzzles. It’s about efficiency, solving boards in fewest moves using tools like hammers and dynamite. No timers, just pure logic and planning. The vibe is casual but challenging, with a focus on clean design and satisfying problem-solving.

Gameplay

Each level drops you on a hex grid with arrow tiles pointing in fixed directions. You rotate these arrows to redirect paths, pop obstacles, and align routes to clear targets. Mistakes mean backtracking. Later levels add locks, mystery tiles that change behavior, and bombs that erase sections. You get limited tools to break deadlocks, use the drill to remove a stubborn tile or dynamite to reset a section. Sessions start simple but escalate quickly; by level 50, you’re juggling ice counters that melt over time and gears linked to chain reactions. Controls are smooth, with haptic feedback on PS5 enhancing tile rotations. Multiplayer lets you build puzzles for others, though it’s not the focus.

What Players Think

Hex Park holds a 4.3/5 PlayPile score with 87% of players completing 50+ levels. Average playtime is 6.2 hours, but 12% finish all 150. Community moods are split: 68% call it “refreshingly calm,” while 32% gripe about “repetitive late-game puzzles.” Achievements include 35 in total, with 78% of players unlocking 20+ via cloud saves. Critics praise its “polished simplicity” (GameSpot, 9/10) but note some levels feel “tinkered with.” The 92% completion rate for levels 1-75 drops to 58% by level 100, suggesting difficulty spikes.

PlayPile's Take

Hex Park is a solid daily puzzle pick for logic fans. At $19.99, it’s affordable but not essential for everyone. The first 75 levels are worth the price, offering clever twists and satisfying solves. Later puzzles lean on gimmicks over innovation, which might frustrate. If you enjoy methodical planning and don’t mind grinding through later stages, it’s a great time-killer. Skip it if you prefer fast-paced challenges or open-ended worlds. Achievements add replay value, but don’t expect a impressive experience.

Game Modes

Single player, Multiplayer

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