Tagged: mobile

Of 2013: Favorite Free Games

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I’m not talking Free-to-Play here, these are four games I spent a good chunk of time with and didn’t spend a penny on (except for Minecraft, but you own that already right?). Microsoft launched Wordament on iOS in 2012 but it came to the web, Android, and Windows 8 in 2013 and I played a bunch of it on each platform. Naturally, swiping around on a touchscreen is the best (and fastest) way to play but any version will do if you’re looking for a unique word game diversion.

When I got my new laptop I went spelunking through the Windows 8 store looking for free games with Xbox Achievements and found Shuffle Party. It’d be more fun with a touchscreen but it only requires one click on the mouse to send shiny shuffleboard pucks and pins careening across the screen. It’s dead simple but still pretty fun — oh and it does have Achievements and even shows your Xbox Avatar celebrate and pout as you play.

The free version of SpinTires was designed as a tech demo/Kickstarter bonus to show the potential of what the final game could be. There’s not much of a point to it but the water physics, real-time terrain deformation and the challenge of getting a giant truck out of the mud kept me at it. Even in demo form the combination of the physics simulations, lighting and the intricate sounds of the trucks made for a dazzling presentation.

Okay, you’ll have to own Minecraft on PC to take a trip to the McMagic server but we bought in so long ago I honestly forgot it wasn’t free. Once logged in you’ll find the most amazingly intricate Minecraft server whose aim is to recreate the entirely of the Walt Disney World parks down to the most awkwardly realized drinking fountains. Katy, Dana, Ryan and I spent a week or so visiting our favorite locations, riding rides, spamming our way behind the scenes and having just as magical a time as we would in the real Walt Disney World.

Send your phone to heaven… if you dare

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I know now how my old phone will die: playing S.M.T.H. Send Me To Heaven is a terrifying Android game that was deemed too dangerous for release on iOS. The concept is simple; S.M.T.H. uses your phone’s various motion sensors to gauge how high you’ve just thrown it. With the goal of “sending it to Heaven” you can image that your frightened little toss of a few inches isn’t going to net you a very high spot on the leaderboards. Indeed, I didn’t dare toss my Galaxy S4 very high at all just now.

It’s one of those clever uses (abuses?) of technology that’s only possible on a mobile device and I love the terror that comes built in with the concept. It also gets a nod for its glaring black-on-yellow design that looks like a safety warning sign. Send Me To Heaven is free on the Play Store so it won’t cost you a thing to risk having to buy a new phone!

A clever, free guessing game based on emoji

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I don’t really play mobile games anymore but every now and then I come across one that does something clever. Utilizing iOS’ built-in emoji character set you guess at the names of 470 words, titles and phrases in hangman style. We all already send these stupid picture messages to one another so why not an actual guessing game based on them? The only thing better would be if it were a ‘with Friends’ or Draw Something style game that you could play directly with friends. Oh yeah, Guess Emoji is free on iOS right now.

E3: Konami combines slots with RPGs to make pseudo-game Slot Revolution

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Love playing 10000000 but hate all that strenuous tile matching? Konami is streamlining the interaction for you and simultaneously branding this as a Revolution title. The only thing that could make this better is if NAOKI was doing the music or if it were called Slot Slot Revolution.

If you’re legitimately interested and not just entertained like I am, the game will be released for free  this Summer for iOS, Android and Kindle. You can even carry your progress across devices if you’re one of those tech journalist types that pack three phones and a tablet.

Arcade Pinball is a pinball table about video games

First there was pinball, then there were video games, then there were video game versions of physical pinball machines and now there’s a video game that’s a digital version of a physical pinball machine that’s based on video games. It’s been done before but Gameprom’s latest table for their Pinball HD app is quite the loving homage to both pinball and video games.

Arcade Pinball pays tribute to Tetris, Q-Bert, Snake, Space Invaders, Spy Hunter, and Breakout all on one table with multiple play fields and one massive screen where several minigames take place. It looks pretty amazing and serves as a reminder for Pinball HD itself which I’d kinda forgotten about. The Android version requires a Tegra device so that rules out my meager phone. I can only hope our original iPad can handle it.