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
Cardboard Castle Review
Come my cardboard children, follow well in order, get your weapons ready. Have you your cardboard lances? Knights! O Cardboard Knights! For we cannot tarry here, We must march my darlings, overcoming fire and soggy paper, direct to the Cardboard Castle. Knights! O Cardboard Knights!Adam’s Venture – Episode 1: The Search for the Lost Garden Review
By Erin Bell
The Search for the Garden Lost Garden is the first episode in planned series of action/adventure games where British explorer Adam Venture and his team go looking for the real Garden of Eden from the biblical Book of Genesis. What that search ends up amounting to is wandering through a series of underground caverns and solving various head-scratching - and sometimes deadly - puzzles that were left behind to try to prevent humans from ever going back to Eden. As a first episode, The Search for the Lost Garden sets the scene nicely for what's to come, but could have been stronger in its own right.Busy Bea’s Halftime Hustle Review
By David Becker
You do not have to be a football expert to enjoy Busy Bea's Half-Time Hustle, a new time management game created by Gold Sun Games where you'll help Bea to support the football team of Blunderton through five different leagues and revealing Mayor McGreety's dark plans for the town along the way. While the game could be seen as a sort of sequel to the Megaplex Madness series, it revamps the concept by adding a lot of features and polish to the already entertaining gameplay.Behind the Reflection Review
By Andy Chalk
Let's cut right to the chase: Behind the Reflection does not impress. It's visually dull, musically generic and tells a disjointed story built around anonymous and entirely unengaging characters. It's also very short and very easy. It feels like it comes from the early days of the hidden object genre, when games lacked the depth and sophistication that's commonplace today. There's nothing specifically wrong with it; you will find hidden objects and you will pursue your missing son. Just don't expect to have a whole lot of fun while you're doing it.Murder Island: Secret of Tantalus Review
In the new hidden object mystery, Murder Island: Secret of Tantalus, you're swept away to a sun-soaked Greek island for your first high school reunion. Accepting an invitation from a well-to-do classmate, you arrive ready to reconnect with old friends but the reunion is cut short when your host turns up dead. Stalked by an unknown assassin, you and your friends search for a way off the island before you too become history.Delicious – Emily’s Childhood Memories Review
By David Becker
The creators of the Delicious series have set the bar pretty high for the time management genre, so imagine how relieved I was while playing the latest instalment of the series, Delicious 6: Emily's Childhood Memories, which again proves what a difference quirky ideas and a moving storyline can make. While not much has changed compared to previous games, the setting and the new restaurants are charming and fresh enough to make this game a highlight for time management fans.Abigail and the Kingdom of Fairs Review
By David Becker
A girl finds a book which opens a portal to another world... What sounds like the usual premise of a hidden object game is actually the foundation for the new building simulation Abigail and the Kingdom of Fairs. While the game is slightly reminiscent of Wonderburg or Carnival Mania, it is unfortunately a case of "Would have been awesome two years ago." That said, it's still worth a look for fans of the genre.Gamebook Adventures 1: An Assassin in Orlandes Review
By Jim Squires
When I first booted up Gamebook Adventures: An Assassin in Orlandes, I honestly wasn't quite sure what to expect. A game where players spend most of their time reading? In a lot of ways it sounded more like a homework assignment than a gaming experience. Needless to say I was both surprised and delight to find that An Assassin in Orlandes delivered one of the most engaging iOS gaming experiences I've had to date.