Apps Games Articles
Puzzles & Survival
37GAMES
Rating 4.3star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
star icon star icon star icon star icon empty star icon
4.3

One-line summary Puzzles & Survival is easy to recommend if you want a surprisingly slick mix of match-3 combat and alliance-based base building, but harder to endorse if you dislike timer-heavy progression and the constant sense that spending money would smooth everything out.

  • Installs

    10M+

  • Developer

    37GAMES

  • Category

    Strategy

  • Content Rating

    Teen

  • Latest version

    7.0.75

  • Package

    com.global.ztmslg

In-depth review
Puzzles & Survival is one of those mobile games that initially looks more disposable than it actually is. From the name alone, it is easy to assume this is just another zombie reskin wrapped around familiar free-to-play systems. After spending real time with it, I came away with a more favorable impression than expected. It is still very much built on the bones of a mobile strategy game, with all the waiting, upgrading, alliance pressure, and monetization friction that implies, but the match-3 layer is not just cosmetic. It gives the game a more active rhythm than many base builders in the same space, and that hybrid structure is the main reason it manages to stay interesting longer than most of its peers. The first hour is busy, heavily guided, and frankly a little misleading. The tutorial moves fast, throws multiple systems at you, and does its best to sell a power fantasy before the slower long-term loop settles in. Once the hand-holding eases off, the real shape of the game becomes clearer: you are developing a sanctuary, training up your forces, improving heroes, joining an alliance, and clearing content through puzzle-based battles that break up the city-management grind. That combination works better in practice than it sounds on paper. There is genuine satisfaction in bouncing from a building upgrade to a hero improvement to a puzzle fight, then back to managing your settlement. The strongest thing Puzzles & Survival has going for it is that it rarely feels like only one game. On some days, it plays like a city builder where you log in to queue upgrades, collect resources, and coordinate with allies. On others, it feels more like a casual puzzle RPG with zombie theming and hero abilities layered on top. That variety helps enormously with retention. A lot of strategy games on mobile become a checklist very quickly; this one at least gives your hands something to do between timers. The presentation also deserves credit. The art direction is polished, and the game understands the appeal of the post-apocalyptic setting without drowning every menu in muddy visual noise. Heroes are flashy, environments are readable, and the overall UI is more approachable than many games in this genre. It still has the usual clutter of icons, currencies, alerts, and event prompts, but the core interactions are smooth enough that I rarely felt lost for long. For a game juggling so many systems, that is an achievement. Another clear strength is the social layer. Puzzles & Survival is dramatically better once you join an active alliance. Construction help, event participation, mutual protection, and simple chat-based coordination all make the game feel more alive and much less punishing. In a good alliance, the experience shifts from solitary maintenance to collaborative progression. It also softens some of the grind because there is a practical reason to log in beyond your own timers. This is not optional flavor; it is central to enjoying the game over time. That said, the game has three recurring frustrations that stop it from being an easy blanket recommendation. The first is monetization pressure. You can make progress without spending, and the game is not unplayable as a free player, but it constantly reminds you that paying would make everything cleaner, faster, and less restrictive. Event rewards can feel tuned to tempt purchases, speed-ups disappear quickly if you are too aggressive early on, and the pace naturally slows once the beginner momentum wears off. If you are sensitive to games that keep nudging your wallet, you will feel that here. The second weakness is that the strategy side eventually becomes more familiar than fresh. The match-3 mechanics add flavor, but the broader loop still leans heavily on standard mobile war-game design: build, wait, upgrade, gather, repeat. Combat outcomes and account strength are influenced heavily by progression systems around your heroes and base, so the puzzle play is fun but not always the decisive star of the show. If you are coming in hoping for a deeply tactical pure puzzle experience, you may be disappointed by how much of the real power curve lives outside the board. The third issue is friction in everyday usability. There is a lot of tapping. Claiming rewards, clearing notifications, managing side systems, and navigating overlapping event layers can become tedious. The game often feels one quality-of-life pass away from being much smoother. Better batch collection, cleaner menu consolidation, and less repetitive busywork would improve the daily experience significantly. None of this ruins the game, but over longer sessions it becomes noticeable. Even with those caveats, I found Puzzles & Survival easier to keep installed than many similar apps. The hybrid design gives it momentum, the zombie theme is handled with enough style to stand out, and the sense of progression is strong enough to keep you checking back in. There is also a nice flexibility to the experience. You can treat it as a light daily management game, a more involved alliance strategy hobby, or a semi-casual puzzler with extra layers attached. Few mobile games in this lane balance those identities this well. Who is it for? Players who enjoy alliance-based strategy games, base building, and long-term progression will get the most from it, especially if they also like match-3 mechanics and don’t mind free-to-play pacing. It is also a good fit for people who want a mobile game with lots to do in short bursts throughout the day. Who is it not for? Anyone allergic to upgrade timers, in-app purchase pressure, or genre-standard grinding should probably stay away. And if you want a puzzle game where raw skill matters more than account development, this is not really that. My overall take: Puzzles & Survival is better than its generic name suggests. It does not reinvent mobile strategy gaming, and it absolutely carries the baggage of that genre, but the puzzle combat, strong presentation, and alliance-driven energy make it more engaging than most zombie-themed mobile builders. Go in expecting a polished hybrid, not a revolution, and there is a lot to like.