Great Migrations is a line drawing game, not unlike Flight Control on the iPod/iPad. You'll guide animals from one side of the screen to the other by painting a line for them to follow with your mouse. You'll avoid predators and other dangers while trying to take advantage of things like wind to aid you on getting all the animals migrated safely. As things progress you'll have more and more dangers to deal with, though the game is always ready to throw you a helper to keep you on a relatively level playing field.
You can argue that all of the city-building games now popular on Facebook descend from Will Wright's SimCity, but none of them resemble that game quite as strongly as CityZen does. CityZen incorporates classic SimCity play mechanics like disasters and keeping your townsfolk happy by carefully arranging roads and public amenities. Where other city-builders might have you level up by attracting citizens, CityZen progresses in a more SimCity-like manner. You level up simply by making your city bigger and bigger, keeping your citizens as happy as you can.
Crime Cityis a Facebook game that lets you take command of your own hood and build your career within the crime world. Open up businesses to collect money, commit crimes to earn rewards and respect, increase your wealth and influence to be the best mafia lord in the city. These are just a few of the things you can do to get started playingCrime Cityby referring to this quick start guide.
Free-to-play MMOs are all the rage these days, with titles like Farmville and Evony getting tons of people hooked on their virtual worlds. As a result, it's not surprising to see Electronic Arts trying to horn in on the multi-billion dollar market with Lord of Ultima, a browser-based strategy/simulation title that gets a surprising amount of stuff right.
Welcome to the strategy guide for Great Migrations. Great Migrations is a line-drawing strategy game from National Geographic played on PC. This guide includes tips and tricks, helpful hints for how to complete Great Migrations.
Facebook hasn't really seen the promised invasion of high-quality games from established, big-name developers using major licensed brands this year... until now, anyway. If CSI: Crime City is an example of what Ubisoft andArea/Code Entertainmentcan do when making a branded Treasure Madness clone... well, I'd hate to be a guy at a tiny start-up with no license making a random Treasure Madness clone. CSI: Crime City is one of the most immediately engaging treasure hunting games on Facebook, though it's cleverly disguised as a crime-solving game.
Directly or indirectly inspired by the 1985 comedy Brewster's Millions, App Genius' My Mad Millions requires you to spend every last penny of $300,000,000 as quickly as possible to qualify for an even larger inheritance. It's actually not an easy task, and if you're like me, you'll come away from the game wondering just how so many celebrities manage to go bankrupt despite earning figures that make my graduate student loans look like chump change. Still, it's an entertaining concept, and one that even yields a very slim chance of making some real-world money on the side.
When I was a kid, and I admit still today, there were two nerd things that I loved: comics and collectable card games. CLASH: Rise of Heroes gives me both without a trip to the comic store.