BattleFruit

Avatar of the game BattleFruit
  • Type:  Traditional game
  • Genre: 
  • Developer:  Guappa Desarrollo Integral SL
  • Release date:  July 30, 2021
  • Status:  Free with in-game purchases
  • Platform:  iOS, iPadOS
  • Language:  English, French, German, Spanish, Vietnamese
  • Rating:  10/10

BattleFruit is a rare example of a board strategy game that can be played blind not in spite of accessibility, but because of thoughtful design.

What you have here is a tactical duel inspired by the classic game Battleship, reimagined in the unusual setting of a kitchen. Instead of ships, there are fruits; instead of shots, kitchen tools; and instead of random guessing, precise calculation, memory, and logic. Your goal is simple and elegant: discover and collect all of your opponent’s fruits before they get to yours.

The game board is a hidden grid where players take turns using different tools, each operating according to its own rules. One tool scans an area, another affects a line or zone, and a third helps determine the exact positions of the fruits. This turns every move into a small puzzle and forces you to think several steps ahead.

Key features:

  • Intellectual gameplay. BattleFruit does not rely on reaction speed. Attention, logical thinking, and the ability to analyze information are what truly matter.
  • Full accessibility. The game is optimized for use with the VoiceOver screen reader. The entire interface is voiced, actions are accompanied by audio feedback, and the menu structure is logical and predictable. You focus on strategy, not on fighting the interface.
  • A massive amount of content. More than a thousand levels are available, presented as “recipes.” Each one offers a unique setup and new tactical challenges.
  • Multiple modes. Hone your skills solo against the computer or face another player in a true battle of wits.

BattleFruit is a calm, clever, and genuinely inclusive strategy game. It proves that board games can be equally engaging for both sighted and blind players. Here, victory belongs not to vision, but to thinking.

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