Grow A Garden 2 Base Price List
By Meriel Green
What's the most valuable crop?Evomon Best Starter [Leafbun, Blazpup, or Bubble?]
By Adele Wilson
Grass-type, Fire-type, or Water-type?Evomon Tier List [META and BEST Evomon]
By Adele Wilson
The Evomon dream team.
Android News
Replay Wednesdays: Gamebook Adventures, Fix-it Felix, and more!
By Jim Squires
We cover plenty of new games here at Gamezebo every week, but the number of games we've already covered that show up on new platforms? It's staggering. Starting this Wednesday and continuing every week, we'll be rounding up the games that aren't quite new, but might be new to you depending on your platform of choice.Backing from Notch, outside funding, and more: OUYA’s Julie Uhrman attempts to take on critics and set the record straight
By Eli Cymet
Since its explosive Kickstarter success, the OUYA - an upcoming, $99 Android console - has been everywhere. With nearly five million dollars raised in just over a week [at the time of writing], it's not hard to argue that people are excited about the prospect of changing the state of gaming on their TV. And yet, the purportedly disruptive product has its fair share of critics. Those who insist there are too many practical reasons preventing the console from attaining its price point, delivering consistent experiences, and proving secure for gamers and developers.Verizon Wireless launches game subscription app on Android
By Dant Rambo
Verizon Wireless has unveiled GameTanium, an app that handpicks quality games for Android users. For the monthly fee of $5.99, users will have unlimited access to over 100 titles for Smartphone and 50 for tablets -- Like Fruit Ninja and World of Goo, to name a few.Benchmark Capital’s Mitch Lasky on the need for publishers to change (GamesBeat 2012)
By Dant Rambo
The gaming industry is rapidly changing. Games are getting funded by the player; indie developers are finding massive success without any sort of financial backbone. Both of these things beg the question: Do we really still need publishers? Mitch Lasky, General Partner at Benchmark Capital, had a few things to say on the subject.5 reasons why OUYA is the next big thing
By Jim Squires
While the announcement of the OUYA was just mere days ago, the device has already stirred up a flurry of commentary from industry watchers and consumers alike. In fact, the $99 Android-powered console might just be the most polarizing tech topic since the reveal of the iPad. The OUYA may have plenty of naysayers - including some of my fellow writers here at Gamezebo - but I'm just having a hard time seeing the downside of free-to-play games in my living room.Ape Entertainment to tell the story behind the blade with Fruit Ninja comics
Ape Entertainment continues its mobile IP landgrab with the announcement that it will produce a Fruit Ninja comic. That's the third IP in what feels like as many days. Ape Entertainment kicked off this series of announcements with news that SQUIDS, a story heavy strategy game, would see the comic treatment. Then there was Temple Run, a slightly less likely choice as it is a game nearly devoid of story. Ape's treatment of Fruit Ninja is even odder, as Fruit Ninja is about a disembodied sword slicing up flying fruit.New achievement: Amazon Introduces GameCircle to compete with Apple, makes steps toward platform growth?
By Eli Cymet
Call me a hipster (please don't, that would hurt my feelings), but I don't care much about achievements. As someone who started gaming in the NES days, high scores, epic boss fights, and, you know, beating the game itself are all pretty good achievements to me. You know who does care about achievements, though? Pretty much everyone else.Hamburger unlocked: Kiip, Raptr, and the quest for real-life achievements (GamesBeat 2012)
By Dant Rambo
Providing players of games with external rewards has become a prosperous business in recent years, and companies Kiip and Raptr have emerged as the frontrunners of the concept. As I learned over the course of a panel featuring Brian Wong (Kiip) and Dennis Fong (Raptr), they tend to approach the model in very different ways.