The song commences with a series of overlapping rushing noises on an
Oberheim OB-X synthesizer, heralding the band's acceptance of electronic instruments into their once explicitly "no synths" sonic repertoire. They played it in their live shows from 1980 to 1982. The song features a soft vocal by Mercury, ending with a strong A4 rising in pitch all the way to C5 in
chest voice (contrary to the other C5s being hit in
falsetto). Mercury also played piano on the track. Described by
Classic Rock as a
power ballad,
Billboard considered "Play the Game" to be a return to Queen's traditional "epic, rather grand sound" after deviating from that sound with the
rockabilly of their prior single "
Crazy Little Thing Called Love".
Cash Box similarly said that this was a return to Queen's "patented high tech,
progressive pop sound" and they commented on "Freddie Mercury's breathless falsetto and sweet piano work" and "Brian May’s soaring lead guitar".
Record World said that "Freddy Mercury leads a celestial choir of pretty falsettos juxtaposed with soaring guitars." Later singles "
It's a Hard Life", "
Let Me Live" and "
You Don't Fool Me" revisit the theme presented in "Play the Game", with Mercury writing from the same lover's perspective years later in the former song, and reflecting on the memories of the failed relationship in the latter. Both "Play the Game" and "It's a Hard Life" are of a similar structure, revolving around Mercury's piano playing and the band's multi-layered harmonies. ==Music video==