![]() The game also supports multiplayer (online and local, or against the PC), and it comes with a single-player campaign to introduce you to the game play. You can either harvest land to get resources to build units, or you can place units on the land to attack/defend. This is a turn-based strategy game where the focus is on resource management, except the resource is the ground you walk on. ![]() ![]() Greed Corp (December 2010), 76% average regularly priced at $10. Some may get frustrated, others will love playing with their creations – I can see this as being one my 10-year-old will love. Your task is to rescue your sister incredipedes, over the course of 60 levels (plus the option to create your own with the level editor). This is a fun and strange puzzle game where you basically build a “robot” of sorts by adding legs and muscles to an eyeball (Quozzle) and then control your creation with the left and right arrow keys. Incredipede (October 2012), 74% average, regularly priced at $10. The Android port is only a few hours (or days, depending on when you see this) old, so if you never picked it up for iOS or Windows/OS X/Linux now would be a great time to grab it. Secrets and other collectibles abound, and this is pretty standard JRPG/Adventure fare. You travel through a dream world in the game, exploring a land that doesn’t always make sense, and there’s a nice sense of foreboding – that something’s not quite right. It’s a relatively short game, with most people able to get through it in a few hours, and the graphics are like other 2D 16-bit games from the SNES era. This is a recent indie game in the vein of early Zelda titles (e.g. The USA 1910 DLC adds three new game variants and 35 new destinations, for a combined 69 destinations with the main game.Īnodyne (February 2013), 75% average, regularly priced at $10. The game supports local pass-and-play (sharing a tablet), solo play (against the AI), and online play. The iOS release (which is a couple years old) proved quite popular and received great reviews, and anyone that’s a fan of the board game will almost certainly appreciate the mobile variant. This is an adaptation of the popular board game of the same name, finally available on Android. Ticket to Ride (Android: June 2013), 91% iOS average regularly priced at $10 (Steam) or $7 (Android) includes USA 1910 DLC ($2). Here’s a quick look at the games included (ordered in terms of increasing age): The interesting twist in this bundle is that all of the games are also available for Android – along with Windows, OS X, and Linux. ![]() As usual, you unlock the core set of games with any donation of one dollar or more, and if you beat the current average you get a couple extra games thrown in.
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