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.
Tag: Puzzle
Treasure Arm Review
By David Stone
We've seen the microtransaction route for a while now in casual games. The idea to purchase in-game currency to speed things up works well with games that have very long tails to them. Genres like MMOs or social games like FrontierVille or Smurfs' Village use it logically and, for many people, advantageously. Treasure Arm tries to use this same technique with a puzzle game and, while it's a great puzzler, the pay-to-play part doesn't really work too well.Bubble Ball Review
By David Stone
Maybe you've heard this kind of Cinderella story before: A Utah-based eighth grader named Robert Nay has created an app that, somehow, has become a sensation on the App Store. It's even spending some time at the top of the free apps chart. If you're looking for a review that echoes the feel-good story here… well, please don't send me hate mail. Bubble Ball is okay, but its popularity seems spurred more by its maker than its contents.Burn the Rope Walkthrough
Burn The Rope is an iPhone game developed by Big Blue Bubble that challenges players to solve a wide range of rope burning puzzles and maybe burn a few bugs along the way. Gamezebo's Burn The Rope strategy guide and walkthrough will provide you with a quick start guide, tips and tricks, hints and cheats on how to solve them all.Burn the Rope Review
We've already spent plenty of time cutting the rope, and now it's time to burn it. And some bugs, too. Burn The Rope is the latest iOS game to take a simple and fun concept and stretch it to make a largely enjoyable and challenging puzzle experience. It's very much in the same vein as Angry Birds and Cut The Rope, and, like those games, it's easy to pick up but hard to put down.DiscoTech Review
By David Stone
We've had ball-based platform puzzle games for quite some time now. In them, we've used everything from marbles to encapsulated monkeys (a phrase you might never expect to type). It finally took develop D7 to realize what was missing: a disco ball! Too bad that the result, DiscoTech is missing a fair bit itself.Fortune Stones Review
As a person who plays Bejeweled Blitz about as routinely as I brush my teeth or put on my clothes, I was a little wary of playing Playteau's Fortune Stones at first. On the surface, the two games are a bit too similar. Both involve connecting three gems to make a match, both give bonus items for matching gems in L and T formations, and both have time limits to add to the exciting. At first, I was ready to write off Fortune Stones as a mere clone. But there's excitement and adventure here beyond the scope of Bejeweled. Fortune Stones pulls off the near-impossible: On some levels, it may actually be the better game.Ballville: The Beginning Review
By Brandy Shaul
While the casual gaming industry definitely isn't lacking in match-three puzzle games, you're more likely to run into titles with little to no originality than to find a game that tries to be different. In comes Striped Arts with a very interesting take on the match-three genre, a game called Ballville: The Beginning, that is one of the more charming offerings in the genre.3bot Review
By David Stone
The best thing about the iPhone seems to be bringing back old games and making them feel fresh and new again, taking classic concepts and elevating them to a whole new level. 3bot takes the classic Q*bert formula and explode it into three dimensions - and does so brilliantly.