5 Puzzle Games To Help You Start Your Day

Since I work from home and both write and game on my computer, sometimes it’s a little hard to get my day started. When you can literally roll out of bed each morning straight over to your work station, it tends to cut out some of the important wake up rituals like taking a shower, drinking some coffee, and actually letting your brain restart after a night of hard sleep. If you’re anything like me, sometimes it takes a little something extra to get your head in the game.
Studies have shown that puzzle games, with regular play, may stimulate cognitive function; Tetris, for example, is said by at least one research group to observably improve critical thinking, reasoning, language and processing by creating structural changes in the brain that cause it to operate more efficiently. These same structural changes are associated with mental practice, an internal visualization process that is vital to sports and puzzles of all kinds, whether you’re playing chess or piecing together a 1,000 piece jigsaw with your grandma. It’s also a key element of certain puzzle videogames, a genre that is also often marked by soothing visuals and music, a combination that is highly conducive to the heightened state of focused concentration known as immersion. In many ways, they seem almost built to be a nice little jog for the brain when you’re feeling sluggish.
Over the years I’ve gotten a lot out of sudoku and Brain Age; I started playing them when I got the Nintendo DS and they both were really helpful. My comprehension improved, my response times were quicker, and I felt less brain fog in the morning. As time has gone on, I’ve found some other games that seem to mirror that same state of focused concentration and incorporated them into my daily routine. Here are five of my favorites that you should try.
Tetris Effect
Tetris Effect is absolutely one of my favorite ways to warm my brain up in the morning. Not only does it have some of the best songs and stages of any Tetris game in existence, it’s can be very soothing if you’re still in a post sleep daze (especially when playing some of the cozier ambiant themes, like Forest Dawn or Zen Blossoms). The Journey Mode’s increasing difficulty, meanwhile, features energetic shifts in imagery and music that help gradually increase your consciousness until you’re operating at full capacity. I’m sure Tetris Effect wasn’t deliberately designed to be my perfect morning mental workout, but I’m happy it worked out that way.