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.
iOS Reviews
Blast Zone! Review
By Nick Tylwalk
Call it fate, destiny or whatever you'd like, but it's only fitting that a company named Kabam would eventually get around to creating a game called Blast Zone! Unabashedly inspired by Bomberman and its many progeny, it's fun to play solo but even more of a hoot to play with or against others. Admit it: you thought I was going to go for the easy one and say "blast" there, didn't you?Considering the gameplay involves running around mazes and planting bombs to blow up other players and AI-controlled characters, Kabam could have gone for something dark and dystopian here. Instead, Blast Zone! takes a cuter, more cheerful route by imagining its competitions as part of a popular TV show. As far as I can tell, no one actually dies despite the massive amounts of explosions that take place.Bridge Constructor Medieval Review
By Nadia Oxford
Solid, sturdy bridges are vital for modern transportation, but they were a super-necessity in ye olden days of carts and horses. Rickety bridges equaled accidents, which equaled spilled beer, which equaled big sadness. Oh, and shoddy workmanship caused people to die as well. That was pretty unfortunate.Bridge Constructor Medieval is another bridge-building game from Headup Games. The same rules apply here as in Bridge Constructor: Build bridges that won't crumple like wet paper when people set foot on them. There are some additional, middle age twists as well.As its name suggests, Bridge Constructor Medieval takes place in the fine days of maidens, knights, and dragons (note: There were no dragons slithering around in medieval times. Do not tell your teacher otherwise). You're tasked with building bridges for a kingdom that's under siege by a band of barbarians.Blek Review
Blek is a minimalist puzzle game that encourages player creativity through a lack of rules, restrictions, or requirements. The only instruction you'll ever be given is to make a gesture; after that, figuring out what to do, how to do it, and if you even want to is entirely up to you.The world of Blek is made up of colorful dots on a white background. Drawing on the white screen creates a line that follows your fingertip as long as you continue drawing. Once you lift your finger, the line is let loose to fly around the screen, yet it's not exactly free: the line will continue mirroring whatever directions you gave it while doodling. As it touches the colorful dots, they disappear, and once all dots are gone the level is complete.Tiny Dice Dungeon Review
By Nadia Oxford
Real heroes fight with dice. That is to say, they roll up their attack numbers and then strike accordingly. They don't whip dice at monsters, which is an entertaining but ultimately ineffective spectacle.Tiny Dice Dungeon from Kongregate is a role-playing game with a battle system that utilizes the art of dice-throwing. You make your way across a monster-infested world, tame beasts to fight alongside you, rescue villagers, and call on Lady Luck as you roll dem bones. There's a lot to do, and like gambling, it's hellishly addictive. If it didn't rely so heavily on ill-suited free-to-play mechanics, it'd be one of the best RPGs available for mobile.Tiny Dice Dungeon takes place in a broken land that's been infested by hostile monsters. Humankind expanded outwards without much regard for the creatures living in the wilds, and said creatures pushed back in a big way. Now you must strike out and try to restore some semblance of peace to the world.Dwarven Den Review
By Nadia Oxford
Dwarves and dogs have one thing in common: Both love to dig. It's possible both enjoy lifting their legs on fire hydrants too, but we'll never know for sure. Dwarves would rather talk about gold and gems than how and where they relieve themselves.Dwarven Den is a puzzle / mining game from Backflip, the studio behind the long popular DragonVale dragon breeding simulator. Unlike DragonVale, Dwarven Den is fast-paced and action-oriented. It's creative, it's challenging, and it's satisfying to play (games that revolve around digging usually are). That said, its free-to-play trappings, though minimal, may frustrate some players.The action in Dwarven Den takes place underground (naturally). A single dwarf begins a quest to dig out and rescue some relatives that are trapped in crystals. Oh, and he pockets whatever loot he digs up on his quest, of course. Finders keepers.Leo’s Fortune Review
By Steven Strom
Leo's Fortune is gorgeous. That's what most of the feedback on the App Store focuses on. It's true, too.The game is textured with what doesn't look like photorealistic grass and stone, but photorealistic fake grass and stone. It's like someone took your friend's meticulously plastered Warhammer terrain -- sprinkled with fake grass shreds and molded rock -- laid it on its side, and through sympathetic magic, morphed it into pixels.The titular Leopold swoops, slides and floats between these artificial artifices. Your left thumb determines right or left momentum, while the right inflates or dives our fuzzy, mustachioed protagonist.Tip Tap Monsters Review
By Nick Tylwalk
Maybe it would be different if I had grown up in Asia, but mahjong isn't the first thing that comes to mind when pondering what would make a good mobile game for the whole family. Crazy Labs obviously thinks slightly differently than I do, which explains why Tip Tap Monsters is exactly what I just described. It uses inviting graphics and an intuitive interface to give it broad appeal, but not everyone will be crazy about the double-fisted monetization system.If you're not familiar with mahjong, it's outside of the realm of this review to explain it. Suffice it to say that it's a tile-matching game that was born in China many years ago, and it's been turned into video games many times over.And yet, maybe not ever like this. Tip Tap Monsters replaces the tiles with cute, rectangular monsters, distinguishable from one another by things like color and the number of eyes they have. They're animated too, blinking while they wait to be selected and jumping up and down when they've been picked as part of a match.ReignMaker Review
By Jim Squires
I have a confession to make: I didn't play Tower of Elements. As a big fan of match-3 genre mashups - and more importantly, match-3 genre mashups that try something new - this is a fact I'm pretty ashamed of. But over the last week, that shame has lessened.I've fallen in love with ReignMaker, better known during its development cycle as Tower of Elements II. As you can probably expect from a game with a previous moniker such as this, the core gameplay should be familiar to anyone who enjoyed the original Tower of Elements. Players will defend their tower (tower… defense?) using match-3 magic. Each match you make will send bolts of magic flying horizontally down the lane that the matched gems occupy. If an advancing enemy is coming down that lane, they'll take damage and ultimately die.It may sound simple on paper, but it's maddeningly fast-paced in execution. You'll be dealing with a large grid of gems, and the enemies won't slow down just because you're having trouble making that perfect match. ReignMaker is a game of quick thinking; of keeping an eye on marching enemies while struggling desperately to find the matches that will obliterate them.