Simple Science: Fantastic Contraption

Contraptions are meant to be badly made, but Fantastic Contraption breaks the mould by employing physics to create useful machines. Fantastic Contraption is a physics-puzzle game built to challenge even the wittiest of persons. Your goal is to build a machine for each stage that can move the red object or objects to a designated area. But it’s never that easy Einstein, there are obstacles and hurdles for your machines to clear else your contraption is destroyed.


You are meant to create a contraption out of the following: a clockwise moving wheel, a counter-clockwise wheel, an unpowered wheel, a water rod and solid wood rods. That where the simple science lies – using this five components over and over to create different contraptions that work. There are no limits to how you can combine the components and make your contraption; you just got to think out of the box if the box isn’t producing the results by visiting www.bestonlinegames2015.org.


The game is a minimalist expression of ideas, yet functional and addictive. You want to solve the next challenge – you begin to trust your creative science brain to always proffer the solutions to the problem at hand. In fact, your creations amaze you that you are considering building a something in your garage. The graphics is 2-D, with simplistic colours used to represent the clouds, the sky and the grass yet created with details that make the game the success it is today.


The game also incorporates a learning-as-you-play approach which basically means as you fail; new knowledge is revealed as to how the components relate to one another, and how you can combine them to make your contraptions. Also your combinations are dependent on you; if you like create a gigantic bulldozer to move a granite stone, it is your entire prerogative.


The one downside I found was trying to connect the rods could be difficult at times because of the design of the wheels. However that is, it is just a minor blip that can be overcome by zooming if your screen is too small. Science doesn’t have to be ‘rockety’ to be fun, sometimes a minimalist and simple approach can be equally productive and fun.