Switching careers and making games isn’t easy. But Shinji Kim pulled it off in nine months.
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“I felt it would be cool to build a puzzle game that is personal to you,” she said.
It took about six months to create Shufflepix and a few more to polish it and figure out how to launch it. Kim said she went through hundreds of iterations on the design and user interface. The game is free to download.
Shufflepix takes pictures from your Facebook profile and turns them into scrambled images. You swap the tiles around to put the image back together. When the border on the image disappears, then the piece is in the right spot. It’s a simple game, but it isn’t easy to master, particularly as a clock ticks away while you play.
You can share your puzzles with friends and see who can solve them the quickest. The game pulls you back by giving you three new picture-puzzles to solve each day. Kim, who worked as an international growth intern at Facebook, hopes that the social nature of Shufflepix will help it spread. The game is built on HTML5, the new lingua franca of the web.
“I haven’t seen other puzzle games that take your pictures and make puzzles out of them on mobile,” Shinji Kim said.
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The free-to-play game will have in-app purchases in the future, and Kim is thinking about publishing it on Android.
Full disclosure: The Casual Connect Europe organizers paid my way to Hamburg, where I moderated a panel. Our coverage remains objective.
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