In this interactive story and match-3 game, you progress through a person's life by completing puzzles and making choices. Includes story narration, relationship management, and satirical elements.
AppRecs review analysis
AppRecs rating 4.9. Trustworthiness 85 out of 100. Review manipulation risk 24 out of 100. Based on a review sample analyzed.
★★★★☆
4.9
AppRecs Rating
Ratings breakdown
5 star
83%
4 star
6%
3 star
0%
2 star
4%
1 star
7%
What to know
✓
Low review manipulation risk
24% review manipulation risk
✓
Credible reviews
85% trustworthiness score from analyzed reviews
✓
High user satisfaction
83% of sampled ratings are 5 stars
About Day Repeat Day
Day Repeat Day is an interactive story and a match-3 game that takes you through the years in a life of an average person. You're hired to do a job. You try to manage your relationships. But you're never really sure where it's all leading to. It's a story about living, the daily grind and what it all means in the end, topped with a sprinkle of satire and mysteries.
After doing a lot of action games, I wanted to do something much more intimate and personal and Day Repeat Day is what came of it.
Press:
- It takes some serious ingenuity to subvert a genre as entrenched as the mobile match-3 game, but somehow developer Kimmo Factor, probably most well-known for the awesome hack ‘n slash game Barbearian, has done exactly that - Game of the Week / Touch Arcade
- It turns out to be much, much more than this, than either genre, a whole, complicated and unique creation, that speaks truth about life, about work, about hierarchies and about mistakes. It’s stunning. - Kotaku
After doing a lot of action games, I wanted to do something much more intimate and personal and Day Repeat Day is what came of it.
Press:
- It takes some serious ingenuity to subvert a genre as entrenched as the mobile match-3 game, but somehow developer Kimmo Factor, probably most well-known for the awesome hack ‘n slash game Barbearian, has done exactly that - Game of the Week / Touch Arcade
- It turns out to be much, much more than this, than either genre, a whole, complicated and unique creation, that speaks truth about life, about work, about hierarchies and about mistakes. It’s stunning. - Kotaku