I'm glad artlogicgames is monetizing the Epic War Saga, it's time. However, I really don't like this commercial format. Too bad they didn't go for an iOS app, or even a one-time purchase of additional content with Kreds. The nickel-and-dime, advertise-to-your-friends-for-us, format is something I keep my distance from. Too bad, I was really excited to see a new Epic War.
Great program! It would be great if I could at least print screen and crop it out of there though. The words and buttons get in the way.
It would be great to have a button that lets me see my character with a background of my choice (and not buttons around). Like a, "Walaa! All done!" screen.
A dollar a card is so much money. That's five complete games on my iPhone. If it was $0.10 a card I'd happily give you $5. Even better, I'm still waiting for an online card battler to come out that uses something like FFG's Living Card Game system. I'd be on board for that. Maybe I should make one (:
This is a fun game! Great in it's genre. One suggestion: it would be neat to have little homes that stored specific monsters. Then, it would be useful to have a few of and upgrade every kind of monster, not just the best you've unlocked.
Last Flake is a little broken with maxed out regen and 180+ HP. She just heals more than the enemies can damage her. Whenever she falls behind, one of her two healing moves catches her up. Fun, exploitable hole in this game, maybe something that should be fixed in the next game.
The pause button really makes this game way more strategic, and less arcade (which it become, to some degree, in the later levels of the earlier games).
I can't wait until Kupo707 gets a high-budget game deal with a big company and I can buy a game. Or... he just makes one himself. I just want to buy from this person to show my appreciation.
What a captivating story! Never before has a mid-life-crisis-as-bildungsroman story been so rich in captivating, tear-jerking, and aching metaphor. The gummies: the things of youth we must leave behind. The bag: the regrets that pull men back to their juvenile proclivities. I'm deeply touched.