Status effects are a bit wonky. Even if you orthe enemy misses the attack, the status will still be applied. Particularily vexing with poison effects applied to you, since they hit harder than the attack would have in the end. Secondly, when you use Roar to cut their attack power, they go from dealing 60+ damage per attack (this is all earlygame I've experienced, first ten levels/floors or so) to dealing... 0. These are pretty big issues for difficulty scaling, but in the overall portrait of the game are minor- It's, frankly, amazing. Keep up the good work.
Interesting and entertaining, but one humungous flaw- It doesn't react to "check" on the flag. If you put it into check, it should immediately attack that piece.
Good game, on the merits of what it copied from the various similar games. bad graphics though, and physics are wayyyyy too simplistic. Most of the rave reviews and high rating is from it being Bieber getting smashed, who is vilified by most people. Not that great a game otherwise.
First level is efinitely too hard for a first level. Otherwise, interesting concept. Would be nicer with more more work involved, and more of a leeway on mistakes.
Quite fun, but you need to fix the browsr-breaking glitch on the starting menu where you can lodge yourself in the wall at the top of the screen off the elevator-side wall.
Because while white might be able to win that battle, it's ultimately a losing war. Think of the number of people you've seen or heard of that've recovered... Only to suddenly be wracked with the same sickness, worse than before, because it -wasn't- cured? Same thing here.
You deserve the monotony if all you do is shoot your basic attack and bow slam. heavy-hitting arbalests are the best weapons, as skills scale off them, and all bows share a very slow speed anyways. When you have at level 20~ around 500 minimum damage and are unloading 1K/tick Arrow Rains on enemies, you pretty much wipe the floor with anything.
Hey Barry723... If you don't know what a red herring is (look it up!) then seriously, you deserve the frustration. Actually, I'll just tell you right out- A Red Herring, by definition, is anything that diverts attention from a topic or line of inquiry- In otherwords, a false clue. It's a very famous literary device that has been used since its origination in 1807, from Sherlock Holmes novels to others, primarily in the suspence and thriller genres, and has also since been transferred to visual media- The "innocent cast in a guilty light" is a rather infamous example used almost everywhere.