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Supersweep is a puzzle game that reimagines the decades-old Minesweeper formula with modern visuals and mechanics. Developed by Vedat Ulas and released in October 2025 for PC, it strips away the retro pixel art for sleek, minimalist design while keeping the core logic intact. The game focuses on single-player matches where you flag hidden mines using number clues. It’s a short, sharp challenge that tests pattern recognition and risk management. Fans of quick, brainy sessions will recognize the familiar tension of balancing speed and precision. The $19.99 price tag makes it a low-risk pick for puzzle enthusiasts, though its simplicity might not appeal to everyone.
Each session starts with a grid of tiles. You click to reveal numbers indicating adjacent mines or detonate a mine for instant loss. The twist is dynamic difficulty scaling, later levels add shifting mine layouts and timed segments. Power-ups like X-ray reveals or area clears spice up the formula. Controls are snappy, with right-click flagging and left-click uncovering, but the lack of keyboard shortcuts could frustrate speedrunners. A typical session lasts 3, 10 minutes, with the 78% community completion rate suggesting most players get through the base campaign but lose interest past level 50. The game’s minimalist UI and lack of tutorials mean you’ll either pick it up instantly or feel adrift.
Supersweep holds a 4.7/5 rating on PlayPile, with 78% of players completing the base game. The 4.2/5 PlayPile score reflects praise for its clean design and addictive difficulty spikes, but 22% of reviews call it “derivative.” Average playtime is 15.5 hours, with 32 achievements (78% completion rate) that reward speedrun attempts and perfect clear streaks. Community moods lean focused (82%) and determined (65%), though 48% also note it’s “calm” for casual play. One user wrote, “It’s Minesweeper but I care about winning,” while another griped, “Where’s the multiplayer? Feels like a missed opportunity.”
Supersweep is a solid, if unambitious, update to a puzzle classic. It’s great for players who crave tight, replayable challenges and don’t mind the absence of modern conveniences like save states. The $19.99 price is fair for what it is, but the 32 achievements offer little beyond the base experience. If you’ve ever obsessed over Minesweeper’s tension but wanted better visuals, this is for you. If you prefer depth over speed, though, you’ll likely find it frustratingly narrow. The game’s strength is its purity, just don’t expect surprises.
Game Modes
Single player
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