Montopia, Zynga's long-awaited, Pokemon-"inspired" collectible card battle game, has finally arrived. It's not the worst game you'll ever play on your phone, but between bugs, sluggish, dull gameplay and an utter lack of originality, it isn't anywhere near the best, either.
Dungeon Rampage is a multiplayer action game created by Rebel Entertainment. Hack, slash, and smash your way through dungeons on your quest to end the tyrannical rule of the corrupt king! Gamezebo's quick start strategy guide will provide you with detailed images, tips, information, and hints on how to play your best game.
Knights of the Rose is an adventure game developed by Row Sham Bow. In this adventure game you will have to keep the citizens of your kingdom happy, protect your castle and safe the princess. Gamezebo's quick start strategy guide will provide you with detailed images, tips, information, and hints on how to play your best game.
It seems that the longer Nintendo refuses to port a Pokémon game to iOS, the closer other companies are getting to finally bringing a successful monster capture franchise to the world's most popular pocket devices - mobile platforms. Facebook's Outernauts was the first game I've played to truly feel like a genuine monster capture game that worked, but I've still been hard-pressed to find a quality mobile experience.
The odds that you've been trapped in a dungeon in real life are pretty slim. The odds that it's happened in a video game, however, are far more favorable. Developers are in love with the idea of tossing us into those rocky underground prisons and challenging us to find our way out. Is it because they hate us? Could be. All I know is Delver's Drop will have us doing it all over again, this time with a gorgeous 16-bit aesthetic.
I'm not exactly certain how the Large Hadron Collider works, but I'm pretty sure you can't use it to smash video games together at super-fast speeds. If you could, maybe you'd fire a fantasy MMORPG, a social city builder and a tactical battle game together and come up with something like Knights of the Rose. Or you might conclusively prove the existence of the Higgs boson, but the game seems like more fun and less math.
Everyone loves a stealthy game launch. When the game in question, Knights of the Rose, is being distributed by Row Sham Bow - the company behind Gamezebo's runner-up for 2011 Facebook Game of the Year, Woodland Heroes - it's even more intriguing. And when said game's website claims that it is "an epic tactical RPG that brings one of the deepest gaming experiences to Facebook," you'd better believe we want to know more.
From the hallowed halls of Ubisoft comes The Mighty Quest For Epic Loot, a free-to-play dungeon raiding game that sends players on mighty quests for epic loot - against each other. This one looks a bit out of character for Ubisoft, which is better known for major game franchises like Assassin's Creed and the various Tom Clancy games, but The Mighty Quest For Epic Loot also looks like it has the potential to be an absolute blast.