When comparing Threes! vs Quell+, the Slant community recommends Threes! for most people. In the question“What are the best puzzle games for Android?” Threes! is ranked 5th while Quell+ is ranked 23rd. The most important reason people chose Threes! is:
There's no time limit to force the issue, but that doesn't matter, because it's so damnably slick to both the touch and the brain that you'll throw moves out with the same speed and grace that climbing into a tiny boat forbids.
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Pros
Pro No time limit to solve the puzzles
There's no time limit to force the issue, but that doesn't matter, because it's so damnably slick to both the touch and the brain that you'll throw moves out with the same speed and grace that climbing into a tiny boat forbids.
Pro Ideal for phones
Being a portrait style game that has large graphics that are meant to be played with one hand, Threes! fits better on a smaller screen device such as phones more so than a tablet.
Pro Pick up and play
A puzzle game should be quick and easy to pick up and play, but deep and challenging enough that it’s difficult to put down - that’s the cliche ideal. Threes is the embodiment of that ideal.
Pro Rewarding
The sense of reward one feels as title are combined makes for a very enjoyable game, no matter how many times it is played.
Pro Easy to learn, hard to master
Pro A free version is available
A free, ad-supported version was released on June 10, 2015 and is available here.
Pro Gameplay suits anyone's style
Threes! can suit anyone's play style, whether it is someone who takes their time and considers all option or someone who just blazes through each move without much forethought.
Pro Polished presentation
Quell+ takes the extra step to have a very polished presentation. First there are no loading screen, so all menus and levels move along smoothly and have zero wait times in any transition. Second is that there is a very artistic design around each level where in a user navigates menus that are presented as a story one must reveal. The overworld is presented as a bookshelf that contains different years as shelves, each shelf has a selection of levels that have an certain theme, changing with each year selected. Overall it is a unique representation that shows a lot of polish over other casual puzzle games.
Pro Superb level design
Though the basis of the game is simple enough, collect all fragments in a level with as little moves as possible, there is quite a bit of good level design that uses a few different elements to make the gameplay challenging. Things like being able to teleport across the board or blocks that appear to block your path once passed over make each level more challenging than the last due to smart level design.
Cons
Con Randomness of game can be frustrating
The randomness of what new tiles appear can be frustrating when nothing is lining up very well.
Con Not a lot of replayability once beaten
Once the game is beaten and all puzzles are solved there is not much reason to revisit the game as there is nothing else left to do, so sadly there is not much replayability once the game is completed.