The fact that Shape Intuition isn’t tagged as part of our Best Android Games series has already given the game away – it’s good, but not one of the best.
It’s a clever idea, mind – your Android phone shows you a shape, then, using the touchscreen to manipulate circles, lines and boxes, you attempt to mimic that shape as well as possible. The game then scores you on your intuitive pressing.
The only downside to all this is Shape Intuition’s lack of levels – you’ll have the game beaten inside two minutes, and the entire thing can subsequently be replayed in 30 seconds or so, once you know what you’re doing in each puzzle.
If the developer ever jazzes it up and adds a few hundred extra levels and ups the difficulty level, though, it’d be a star. As it stands, Shape Intuition’s good for a couple of minutes of fun only.



INQ’s Android phone is an interesting “boutique” piece of hardware, packed with unique interface customisations that go far beyond the headline Facebook integration. We like it a lot.
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