When you have a game with a title like Supermagical, and one of your developers is called the Super Awesome Hyper Dimensional Mega Team, you know you're in for something a special. Together with gPotato, the SAHDM Team has been working for 14 months to deliver a puzzle game unlike any other.
Remember the good old days of playing basketball out on the schoolyard courts? When it didn't matter who won or lost, and everybody was in it for the camaraderie? Just you, a couple of friends, your flaming ball, some teleporters... wait, what? From the minds of Solipskier creators (and cleverly named developer) Mikengreg comes an inventive re-imagining of the classic shot-matching game of H-O-R-S-E: Gasketball.
7:30 PM: All right, I think I've gotten the hang of Polymer. I've unlocked all three modes, played each one to death, and made some pretty awesome shapes. I'm really digging this "chess meets LEGO" vibe. I should have all the notes I need to finish this review...unless. Maybe just one more game? 12:30AM: File. New Document.
While just about every other game has you mowing down aliens in a never-ending kill fest, Save the Aliens wonders what would happen if you put yourself in the aliens' shoes.
The Hairys may be a good bunch of guys, but they're not the brightest bulbs on the tree. So it's up to you to set them on the right path in Hairy Tales, the upcoming hex-based strategy-puzzle game.
There are two eras of mobile gaming: Before and after Angry Birds. Like it or not, it's impossible to deny the influence it had on gaming as it solidified mobile devices as legitimate platforms. Because we live in the "After Angry Birds" era, it's pretty much impossible to play a game like Shark Dash for more than five minutes without comparing and contrasting the two. The similarities are noticeable, but it's the differences that allow Shark Dash to stand out from the rest.
If you first encountered the internet, say, three years ago, you'd be excused for wondering about our intense fascination with cats and their special speech patterns. I'll admit to thinking quite a few are pretty hilarious in their time, though I'd also admit that for the most part I think that ship has sailed and the Cheeseburger loving cat that had his time in the sun is about ready to move into the digital pasture so we can find something new to laugh at. So making a game about one of those cats now seems ill-timed.
Hambo is an iPhone game like many others; your goal is to solve numerous puzzles to slay your enemies within a single-screened environment. But unlike, say, Angry Birds, you are not launching your character in a slingshot, nor are you stuck using weapons from the middle-ages as in Crush the Castle. You are Hambo, a pig with access to numerous firearms featuring different attributes, each of which are necessary to succeed in your mission.