Our Verdict
A joyous and addictive action puzzler. Its packed full of brilliant puzzles, animations and an infectious sense of fun.
PC Gamer's got your back
Giant stone balls are the natural enemy of the heroarchaeologist. They flatten our fedoras, chase us down long corridors and guard the tombs we're trying to loot. The Ball busts that paradigm, handing you a bonecrushing pet boulder as your sole tool for solving first-person puzzles. It's like a wacky, mismatched copbuddy movie. Lethal Weapon, with Mel Gibson as The Ball.
You've fallen into a Mexican pit, full of enough miles of beautiful forgotten ruins to fill a decade's worth of National Geographics. You find an enchanted, gun-shaped artefact that acts as a controller for a large, ancient steel ball. It has two functions: magnetically drawing the ball toward you, and punching it away from you with a superpowerful piston. This is the basis for six hours' worth of underground puzzle-machinery-driven challenges that task you to move gears, traverse lava, loosen stone blocks and push buttons to raise water levels to advance to the next room. If Portal was about mid-air agility and outside-the-box, cerebral problemsolving, The Ball is about slow momentum and pushing your way into the next room with God's bowling ball. Think of it as a magical Mayan bowling alley.
It has more combat than Portal, even if that combat is simple and over quickly: between puzzle rooms you're chased by entombed horrors, such as mummies and a zombified King Kong. These aren't clever enemies: they run directly at you, and swat you with their decrepit claws until you either die or crush them with your weighted companion sphere. Being mostly defenceless kept me off-balance in places – I caught myself in a panicky fit of bunnyhopping at one point, yelling “Ohgodohgod!” when I was separated from my ball and hounded by angry mummies. But the fighting doesn't demand any creative thinking: even the handful of bosses use the tired, matador-style 'lure, dodge, attack' mechanic we've seen in hundreds of games.
Difficulty is at its greatest in the four-level survival mode, which dumps waves of enemies into a circuit of hazards and makes you leap through hordes of giant bugs and mummies to reach controls that activate deadly traps.
It's The Ball's puzzles that make it unique and worthwhile. None of them are particularly brain-breaking (and there's a hint button within reach at all times). Most amount to guiding your globe over obstacles to reach buttons, but they're gently paced in a way that produces something calming and enjoyable (in between mummy attacks). You lead the lumpen sphere around like it's a giant puppy, coercing it to do your bidding. The easy, intuitive fun of kicking your dynamically-lit, polished, multi-ton marble through the environment and watching the ballet of Newtonian physics play out is an adventure in itself.
A joyous and addictive action puzzler. Its packed full of brilliant puzzles, animations and an infectious sense of fun.
Evan's a hardcore FPS enthusiast who joined PC Gamer in 2008. After an era spent publishing reviews, news, and cover features, he now oversees editorial operations for PC Gamer worldwide, including setting policy, training, and editing stories written by the wider team. His most-played FPSes are CS:GO, Team Fortress 2, Team Fortress Classic, Rainbow Six Siege, and Arma 2. His first multiplayer FPS was Quake 2, played on serial LAN in his uncle's basement, the ideal conditions for instilling a lifelong fondness for fragging. Evan also leads production of the PC Gaming Show, the annual E3 showcase event dedicated to PC gaming.
Halo 2's playable E3 2003 demo is an astounding feat of preservation, and everything great about PC gaming
Sony says it should've gotten more feedback before launching Concord, but it isn't done seeking live service hits despite 'a certain amount of risk'
Following Arcane's season 2 premiere, Riot drops our first look at Jinx's moves in fighting game 2XKO