Cessabit: a Stress Relief Game is a trivia puzzle game developed by Tepes Ovidiu. The last update, v1.50, released on November 24, 2020, and it’s rated 4.45 out of 5 based on the latest 601 reviews. Cessabit: a Stress Relief Game costs $1.99 and requires iOS 8.0+ and Android 7 or newer to download.
Spot all the hidden clues
Cessabit: a Stress Relief Game Gameplay Overview
Description
•This game will help you relax. Remember what you see and answer the questions. Inspect each illustration for clues, tap objects for hints and solve complicated objectives.
Want to enjoy Cessabit: a Stress Relief Game on your desktop? Download the latest APK (1.50, 37 MB) or choose your preferred version, and follow our Bluestacks emulator guide for easy installation on Windows or macOS. For any assistance with downloading or installing, feel free to visit our forums!
I really love the concept of this game, but there are some pretty major problems.
1. Not enough levels. I assumed there would be a decent amount of levels, but as of right now, there aren’t. I finished them all in about an hour.
2 There is no way to tell which levels you have beaten and which you haven’t.
3. I’m not sure I would consider this game “relaxing”. Some of the puzzle are down right frustrating.
★★☆☆☆Frustrating
This is an interesting app. Unfortunately sometimes when I touch the image absolutely nothing happens. I go back later and a few things happen. So when presented with images and questions to answer I have not seen the objects/images no matter how many times I have tapped. When I close the app and go back in one or two appear. Is this supposed to happen?
★★★★★Awesome
Awesome! Review.
★★☆☆☆Not worth it if you actually want to relax
Stresses me out trying to figure out what it wants me to do, and actually frustrates me more than relaxes me. It’s pretty easy to figure out usually, however I was looking for an app to chill me out not make me tap a screen a million times looking for clues.
★★☆☆☆Not relaxing
I expected a meditative experience, getting into the images to absorb the details. This was partly accurate, but made difficult by Controls that seemed inconsistent. Some of the images are disturbing (downed planes, sinking ship) and the music induced a sense of anxiety over time.