This game makes me wonder. It makes me wonder as to WHY the man is in gap. Also, how does the gap change? Is someone trying to kill the man in gap? Why? So many questions.
This game raises several questions with me: 1. Why is everything either green or black? 2. Why is the cheese floating? 3. Why did people start rioting? Is it because there is no more tides and the sea is flatter than ever? And 4. What blew up the moon?
This virus seems to be a pretty weak one against the human immune system. It's a hit and miss, I guess... either the infected person dies in five seconds, just standing there with no treatment, or they just become better, also with no treatment.
@Shortna the fire button can be held down. it's a nice game, make a sequel, with some upgrades, enemy diversification, graphical increases, and it'll still be a cookie-cutter game, but a good one.
This game is incredibly frustrating. The game itself isn't too hard. It's my keyboard. The arrow keys' inputs often STICK, usually to the left. So when I play the game, sometimes I just go zipping to the left, up, down, or right after just a tap of the respective buttons. And, the keyboard is only two weeks old.
@Superdude037 This game isn't a ripoff of anything, it's based off of the Starfighter series of flash games, and I think there aren't many gameplay similarities. Mining in space games is not new, and some games before EVE had mining in them, like Freelancer (which came out March 2003, EVE came out in May 2003), so you can't really call it a ripoff if it's just a multiplayer version of another, (Semi in concept) original game.
The final boss sure was hard, so was level 14 to do perfectly; those spinning disks have ample health to withstand about 4 seconds taking 180 damage a second. I found that the final boss' missile attack killed me most because of its number of salvos and high damage per missile. Supreme Ninja's guide is correct, but I mostly didn't use it and spent almost two hours on perfectly beating levels 10 and 14 as well as doing the boss.