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.
PC Reviews
Fortix 2 Review
Contrary to popular opinion, it turns out that enchanted swords and magic wands aren't the best way to fight dragons and other monsters of legend. Believe it or not, the best weapon is apparently a simple fence. Yes, once these beasties are surrounded by nothing more than some cyclone fencing, they no longer pose any sort of threat to hapless civilians or brave heroes. Dragons, it turns out, are kinda stupid. Or, at least, they are in Fortix 2.Clash of the Dragons Review
I fancy myself a serious "casual" player of collectible card games (CCGs). I'm quite fond of Magic: The Gathering and went all gaga when Shadow Era came to my PC, iPod, and iPad. But until now I've never played a CCG on Facebook, so I really didn't know what to expect out of Clash of the Dragons. But a unique damage system hooked me in pretty quickly.Millennium Secrets 2: Roxanne’s Necklace Review
By Brandy Shaul
As we step back into the shoes of secret agent Kate in Millennium Secrets 2: Roxanne's Necklace, we're left to unravel the mystery behind an ancient necklace, split into multiple pieces to avoid it falling into the wrong hands. These gems have the power to unleash unbelievable destruction, so Kate must find the pieces before the Syndicate lays claim to them first.Total Domination Review
By Alicia Ashby
Strategy games on Facebook have, to a certain degree, ossified around the time-consuming Travian formula of manufacturing resources, building armies, and battling other players for dominance and territory. Only variations in the GUI skin and the theme sometimes separate these games, which otherwise use a very standard interface. Total Domination: Nuclear Strategy is a take on this type of game that clearly wants to shake up some aspects of the formula, particularly the tendency toward Spartan, near-identical user interfaces.Paranormal Crime Investigations: Brotherhood of the Crescent Snake Review
By Andy Chalk
Paranormal Crime Investigation: Brotherhood of the Crescent Snake is a game in need of balance. It looks great, sounds great and serves up some of the most challenging hidden object gameplay I've ever run into to. But everything else about it is disappointingly half-baked, from the short, silly story to the dull minigames and even the unimpressive collector's edition extras. The net result is a game that hints at excellence but ultimately falls short of the mark.Sacra Terra: Angelic Night Review
By Darcie King
Once again, you find yourself awakening in a rundown mental hospital, alone and with no memory of how you came to be there. Very quickly you learn that not only are you in danger, but the whole world is as well. Due to a magical ritual that went horribly wrong, the demons of the seven deadly sins have been released in Sacra Terra and you must find a way to send them back to the beyond before they are released into the world at large.Dungeons of Dredmor Review
By Alicia Ashby
Dungeons of Dredmor is an RPG, but it's probably not the sort of game you imagine when you read those three genre-defining letters. Dungeons of Dredmor is what enthusiasts call a roguelike, a very challenging sort of dungeon-crawling RPG that descends from the classic PC game Rogue. The basic idea of this type of RPG is that you, a solo hero, must survive a gauntlet of randomly-generated dungeon levels with nothing but your wits, whatever equipment you can scrounge up, and whatever skills the game permits you to acquire.F.A.C.E.S. Review
In the over-crowded world of the hidden object game, there are hidden object games (meh) and then there are Hidden Object Games (wahoo!). Though on the surface, games in the genre might seem easy to make—just toss a load of random things together so people can sort through them—the difference between a great hidden object game and a so-so one comes down to clever design, skillful story construction and loving attention to detail. Lucky for us, the people at Vogat Games are experts at making the former variety and F.A.C.E.S. is a stellar example.