![]() ![]() Your goal is to snake your letters across the board making words until you’re able to make a word that includes a letter from your opponent’s home row. You then snake out from your row spelling out words. You take on an opponent, each of you gets a single row of letters on a 13 X 11 grid of letters. What it does have is a simple game that is easy to learn. It isn’t as well designed, and it doesn’t have a famous pedigree of developers. Wordbase may not have the kind of buzz that Letterpress did, but it is a better game. What Sucks: It’s not clear on how to unlock hard difficulty mode, missing instructions on using and unlocking powerups.īuy it?: If you are looking for a unique puzzle game with a focus on replayability, grab Next – Numbers on the App Store for $1.99. What’s Good: Minimal design, lots of challenge modes, and good replay value. The game has its own leaderboards so you always know where you stack up, with some people solving the easy mode in less than a second. That simplicity oddly enough creates a replay value encouraged by the fact each game only takes around a minute or so to play. ![]() There are statistics tracked for each game that make it finishing something just a second faster feel like an accomplishment. The game starts with an easy and medium difficulty, which has 15 and 35 numbers respectively. You can either do this with or without a time limit. You get a grid of numbers and you need to tap all of them in order as fast as you can. Next – Numbers may be the first game that appeals to people who spend a lot of time with newsprint and pencils. However, few of them have the simplicity of a pen and paper game. There are a lot of casual games on the iOS platform. ![]()
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