It's no secret that Square Enix loves Final Fantasy IV: it's the second-most ported game in the Final Fantasy series and one of only two Final Fantasy titles to be completely remade thus far. It received a sequel 17 years after its initial release (a favor usually reserved for a game's primary life cycle), an extra character in Theatrhythm Final Fantasy (as did Square's top-grossing Final Fantasy VII), and a two-volume novelization. Square's (and its fans') love affair with Final Fantasy IV continues in its recent iOS release.
If you're going to borrow, you may as well borrow from the best. The much anticipated fantasy RPG Ravensword: Shadowlands owes a lot of its look and feel to the Elder Scrolls series, particularly Oblivion and Skyrim. Considering the popularity of those titles, Crescent Moon Games was smart to pick them as its muses, and despite a little bit of unevenness, the result was worth the wait for iPhone and iPad owners.
Form a battle brigade with your friends in Final Fantasy Airborne Brigade, an exciting new RPG from Square Enix and Mobage! Fight against formidable enemies as you enter magical realms, customize your power house character with jobs, abilities, and weapons and make friends with magical creatures as you join the royal airborne brigade and restore light once again to the guardian crystal! Gamezebo's quick start strategy guide will provide you with detailed images, tips, information, and hints on how to play your best game.
Most free-to-play games adhere to a fairly strict set of rules, and doing so tends to make them far less interesting than they could be. However, as with most other games of any genre, taking a familiar theme or idea and doing something even slightly out of the ordinary with it can make a huge difference. It's probably the reason I've been enjoying Knights & Dragons: Rise of the Dark Prince so much.
Knights and Dragons: Rise of the Dark Prince is a persistent city-building game developed by Gree. Gamezebo's quick start strategy guide will provide you with detailed images, tips, information, and hints on how to play your best game.
I honestly can't explain the appeal of the Mafia Wars-style "casual text MMO," which basically uses its players' impatience as currency. It's a strange brand of freemium game that seems to draw users into any incarnation, whether it's yet another mob-builder like iMobsters, a collectible card "adventure" like Rage of Bahamut, or an only semi-related "spinoff" to a popular series, like Final Fantasy Airborne Brigade. As baffling as the genre's popularity is, I'm even more confused by this newest development: I can't stop playing Airborne Brigade.
Isn't it crazy how defensive some people get when you try and lay waste to their towers? I mean, it's a free world, and I can go around destroying large, manmade structures if I want to. Take the protagonist of Elements Defender, for example. She's super gung-ho about protecting the towers that maintain the balance of the world she lives in. Lighten up, am I right?
As the title suggests, Leah's Tale follows the story of a young girl named Leah. She begins her adventure as a happy, well-to-do child eagerly preparing for a lavish birthday party. After running a few errands and chatting with some townsfolk, she heads off to bed in order to rest up for the upcoming festivities. The following morn, she rushes outside to begin the celebration, only to be torn away from her home by mysterious group of strangers and be whisked away to a strange land.