sarcastro, did you seriously just reply to my 5 year-old message? I didn't even remember this game existed until I saw a notification about your reply.
Anyway, for the record, no, I don't believe I'm owed anything. It's your game, the result of your hard work, which you've provided freely. However, from my experience, it's both customary and good for your (developers') reputation for you to give us (the players) updates, even if only to say "I'm not working on it". It's a simple matter of communication. Absence of communication makes us think you don't care, which drives players away.
@Everyone complaining about Giga (G), Tera (T), and so on: those are the prefixes used in the SI. Using million, billion, and so on is nowhere near as universal, for the simple fact that the world is divided roughly 50/50 on short and long scales, yet only a handful of countries don't use the SI prefixes. It's not something that needs to be fixed because it's not broken in the first place. Otherwise, you end up with ridiculous "numbers" like "Trequadragingtillion".
Not sure if this is intentional, but, if you freeze a building that has a bubble on it (the ones that contain temporary upgrades) then conquer it, you won't get the temporary upgrade.
Finally, a game that lets you sell the turrets for what they're actually worth, rather than half the price or less. (Yes, I realize there are probably more games like this. It's called "hyperbole".)
If you get a glitch after picking a mushroom in which you'll basically get an extra worker, do NOT take advantage of it, unless you can stay online until the upgrade/building is done. If you try to take advantage of it and refresh the page for some reason, you will lose the resources you were using on one of the buildings.
Although your games are good and deserving of at least a 4/5, they will be rated by 3/5 by a large portion of us because you have NEVER taken the time to install a "Next level/puzzle" button. You read the comments, as evidenced by the fact that you reply to them, so I can only assume that you don't care about fixing things like that.