Kex Is The Abstract Board Game The PC Engine Never Got

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Kex Is The Abstract Board Game The PC Engine Never Got

https://retrohandhelds.gg/kex-is-the-abstract-board-game-the-pc-engine-never-got/

You ever look at your dusty PC Engine and think, “Man, this thing needs more marbles”? Well, now it does.

Enter Kex—a sleek, free homebrew board game that slinks onto the 8-bit console like it was always meant to be there. Think chess meets Tetris, but with colorful marbles and zero dialogue. You slide your four pieces around a tiny grid, trying to form patterns—corners, blocks, lines—to score tokens. Win five rounds? Match over. Simple. Satisfying. Surprisingly deep.

The best part? It’s perfect for the PC Engine’s aesthetic. Low-res pixels, high-contrast vibes, chiptune soundtrack by VodSound? Check. Even has a “Kexians” mode where marbles turn into tiny little characters—because why not? Local multiplayer, solo play, or just sit back and watch two AIs duke it out like chess-obsessed robots. All in a teensy 256KB ROM.

No shooters. No platformers. Just pure, marble-based strategy. And it’s free. Download it, pop it into your EverDrive or Analogue Pocket, and finally give that neglected console the abstract elegance it deserves.

Your coffee table’s about to get a lot more interesting.