AUTHOR
Toki
Retro & alternative sources · digging through time
1980s Sokoban, NES puzzlers, Flash-era browser games, free itch.io puzzles, paper pencil puzzles. Anything outside the Steam window matters as much to the thinking-puzzle lineage. I write as someone digging through layers of time.
Specialty
Non-Steam puzzle lineage from the 1980s onward
Hobby
Re-reading scanned issues of vintage Japanese PC magazines (Beep Mag, Login)
Drink
Warm sake
Weekend
Digging through library local-history archives or online retro-game magazine scans
Quirk
Can't finish an article without including at least one specific year
Essays
The Incredible Machine (1993) — The Toy Box That Made Rube Goldberg Playable
Released in 1993 by Dynamix and Sierra, The Incredible Machine laid gears, balls, fans and cats across a single screen and asked players to build Rube Goldberg contraptions. Assembled in nine months on a $36,000 budget, this toy box—together with its Free Form sandbox mode—became a headwater of the modern physics-and-contraption puzzle. This essay traces the twenty-one years until its own creators put Contraption Maker on Steam in 2014.
Mario's Picross (1995) — Picture Logic, a Form Born in 1987
Released for the Game Boy on March 14, 1995, Mario's Picross translated into play the 'picture-logic puzzle' that two inventors had independently created in Japan eight years earlier. From newspaper puzzle to game, and on to today's Steam nonograms, this is the lineage of a single logic puzzle that survived almost half a century without changing its core.
Sokoban (1982) — The 44-Year-Old Prototype of Meta-Puzzles
In 1982, Hiroyuki Imabayashi of Thinking Rabbit released Sokoban. Forty-four years later, walk-and-push is still the bedrock of Baba Is You and Patrick's Parabox. Reading the lineage backward from period context.