
Are you an avid puzzle-enjoyer with time to spare? Big Fish Games has come out with the full collector’s edition of Finding America: The West, a hidden objects title full of unique challenges and minigames. Developed by Boomzap, this game offers a de-stressing romp through the magnificent landscape of the American West through a variety of low-stakes puzzles.
Finding America: The West Collector’s Edition is available on Steam, PC, the PlayStation 5, and the Nintendo Switch.
Welcome to the Wild West
Finding America: The West offers a hefty puzzle-based campaign through the western United States, featuring vivacious scenes of the Grand Canyon, Santa Monica, Yosemite National Park, the Redwood Forest, and more!
The main game has 38 campaign chapters. The collector’s edition provides 12 bonus chapters, but they cannot played until all of the base campaigns are finished. Each chapter is centered around a specific location and has two to four different puzzle games, mostly finding hidden objects. These HOGs come in a variety of modes, including the “standard mode,” the “scrambled mode” (the items to find present themselves in jumbled, randomized letters), and “image mode” (the items to find are silhouetted).

After finishing all of the HOGs in a chapter, players must then complete a minigame to move on. These minigames offer a great variety of puzzles, and certainly a type for everyone! These include jigsaw puzzles, sliding puzzles, spot the difference challenges, among others.
Players can choose their difficulty setting at the start of the game. Luckily, you can adjust this if needed. The easy and medium difficulties have relatively fast hint-recharging and have no miss-select penalties. Hard mode has a notably longer hint-recharge time and will give players a miss-select penalty. This means that if you accidentally (or intentionally) click the wrong item in the HOGs, you are docked points. Players are free to customize the difficulty as well.
Stars and keys forever
It is a nice feature to be able to customize the difficulty. Overall, Finding America: The West is a low-key, self-paced, puzzle-solving experience. Easy and medium difficulties soften frustrations from miss-clicking, because it is pretty easy to press random spots of the screen by accident. Although, hard mode will definitely provide more of a challenge for those looking for it.

If wanted, players can receive hints and “superhints.” Regular hints reveal the location of one unfound hidden object, while “superhints” reveal all the remaining objects to find. Use them wisely! Depending on the difficulty setting, the recharge time for the hints will vary, but it is usually always under a minute. Not too challenging at all in this regard, fitting the relaxing, chill vibe of the game.
Another extra mechanic include finding stars and keys. These can be found in each and every scene. Finding a star unlocks that scene’s “unlimited mode,” which will allow players to replay the level as many times as desired. Though it is kind of unfortunate that a star is needed to replay levels. More specifically, I wished that the campaign mode was not so linear; it would be nice to skip around and play locations that interest me, playing scenes in whatever order I would want. I do not see what is stopping the game from allowing players to do this, because Finding America has no storyline. You also have to wait until the very end for the bonus content, which is very limiting.

The keys that can be found per scene will give a fun fact about the location you are playing in. This is a neat little detail that makes the game a bit of a learning experience!
Take a closer look . . .
For the most part, Finding America: The West Collector’s Edition is a smooth, enjoyable experience. There are loads of content to uncover, and players can get rewarded with a multitude of downloadable wallpapers.

A big downside, at least on the Nintendo Switch version (which I played), is that the game has various bugs. Sometimes, a scene would show up completely white and blank, with the HUD visible or not. Or, it would take several clicks until the game registered that I pressed an object. The most frustrating bug was when I would zoom in or out of a scene with the magnifying glass, but then the screen would lock and I could no longer zoom or move. I would have to reload scenes several times throughout my playthrough to negate these performance issues.
Final thoughts
Finding America: The West is a solid hidden objects game suitable for any age, and any sort of puzzle fan. There is a massive amount of content well worth the price. I would not say that Finding America is remarkably unique from other Big Fish titles, but I appreciate the wild west theming and diversity of puzzles.

The bugs present slight problems, but they are not game-breaking, only frustrating. If you have spare time and want to challenge yourself mentally, then this is a nice middle-of-the-road, enjoyable game.
























































