Othello Five: Strategy Line Game

Hypercasual Score: 7.6

Description

Flip pieces in Othello Five—aim for 5 in a row or wipe out foes. Three AI levels, modern looks. Try solo or versus friend gameplay.

How to Play

  • Mouse click or tap to play.

Tags

1 Player2 Player2DBoardCasualHypercasualStrategy

About

Othello Five flips things—literally and figuratively—on the old board game formula most people know. Here, it’s not just about having more pieces at the end. Now you’re laser-focused on getting five stones lined up or clearing the board entirely, which means every move feels a bit sharper and mistakes sting more than usual. Watching your opponent’s stones switch color as you trap them is still satisfying (I mean, that never gets old), but suddenly you’re scanning lines and diagonals constantly. There are three computer difficulty options: Easy is laid-back, honestly almost sleepy; Normal makes you pay attention; Hard? Well, good luck not getting outmaneuvered. The AI thinking process can actually be watched too if you're curious—or want to see what you missed last time. Solo against AI or versus a friend next to you; quick matches or extended face-offs if you’re stubborn like I am sometimes. The interface is uncluttered and looks smooth enough even when playing on breaks at work or just idly tapping away on your phone at night. To be honest, this one isn’t just for hardcore strategists either—it works as a casual time-killer with sneaky depth if you want it. Odd how simple tweaks change everything.

Review

At first I assumed Othello Five would just be another reskin of the regular game (and I've seen plenty). But trying to build five in a row rather than simply dominating with numbers actually changes how my brain tackles each turn. It threw me off—I got caught up thinking about old Othello tactics and then realized halfway through, nope, gotta rethink all that. The animations help keep things engaging enough for repeat rounds. Honestly, watching the AI's thought process was surprisingly useful (and occasionally humbling). I wish there were online multiplayer though—that part does feel missing. Still found myself going back for one more match quite often.