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14 votes
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3D printed organizers for Catan Junior
7 votes -
Favorite quick play tabletop game recommendations
With Christmas around the corner I'm wondering if anyone has tabletop/card games they enjoy that are quick to play (in my mind less than 30 minutes). I enjoy longer games like Betrayal at House on...
With Christmas around the corner I'm wondering if anyone has tabletop/card games they enjoy that are quick to play (in my mind less than 30 minutes). I enjoy longer games like Betrayal at House on the Hill immensely, but I'd like to add some games to my collection that are fun and light hearted, easy to learn, and idealy travel easy. I often play games with family over the holidays and want some that aren't as intimidating for my parents and older relatives to pick up and try. I often played with at least 2 other people, but I've been looking for fun 2 player games as well.
Can you please share what the gameplay is like and what you enjoy about playing it? Thanks all!
29 votes -
Winlator Corefonts Pack (Fixes Steam UI, Epic Games Launcher, and others in Winlator Glibc)
6 votes -
Played Taboo with my friends
Like the title says, I played Taboo with my friends yesterday. It's decently fun, but every time I play it, the thing that sticks with me is how shocked I am that some players don't know what...
Like the title says, I played Taboo with my friends yesterday. It's decently fun, but every time I play it, the thing that sticks with me is how shocked I am that some players don't know what certain things are or how bad they are at thinking on their feet. On the plus side, it's also a chance for people who you'd unfairly judged to make a good impression.
What are some other games that have consequences like these that you haven't heard people discuss before?
17 votes -
Churchil Solitaire - The game that turned me off from buying mobile games
Churchill Solitaire is a mobile game that you can play on Apple or Android devices. It came out in 2016. I found out about it in 2018. It had some very good reviews. It was mentioned that the game...
Churchill Solitaire is a mobile game that you can play on Apple or Android devices. It came out in 2016. I found out about it in 2018. It had some very good reviews. It was mentioned that the game is difficult to beat. At the time I was playing some different solitaire games on mobile so I decided to try another. I paid $4.99 to unlock "all deals and free play".
The game is pretty good. $5 was a little expensive to pay for a game that only had one variation of solitaire. For example, I had the game Solebon Pro which has 160 variations. That game cost $10.
So Churchill Solitaire is not a great value. Not all games have the same value of course. But the reason I stopped playing it is because it charges you to get hints and undo moves. A game that is this hard just wastes your time if you can't undo. You can get quite near the end of a session and need to completely restart because you had several choices earlier and picked the wrong one.
Here is the In-App purchase list that is currently on the App Store in 2024. I don't remember if these prices were the same in 2018, but they are the current prices if you want to unlock any of the features:
- Undos - 15 Pack $0.99
- Hints - 15 Pack $0.99
- Undos - 100 Pack $5.99
- Hints - 100 Pack $5.99
- Unlock All Deals & Freeplay $4.99
- Game Pack 1 $0.99
- Daily Game (Monthly) $4.99
- Game Pack 2 $0.99
- Game Pack 3 $0.99
- Undos - 50 Pack $4.99
I understand that the developer should get paid money for unlocking the basic game. I understand that making additional winnable deals may take developer time (most deals are unwinnable in this game, but there is a "campaign" that has winnable deals). I understand that having a daily game may cost the developer to maintain servers and create winnable deals.
But I don't understand charging for hints or undos. I mean, I understand it from a greed perspective. But not from an "I respect the people who paid money for my game" perspective. Yes, I know about Candy Crush and all the other super addictive mobile games that are pay to win and farm money from whales. But this one just pissed me off in particular. This is the mobile game equivalent of heated seats in a BMW.
Since 2018 I've only bought 2 mobile games. So sorry other game devs, I don't even check the app store for games anymore.
Edit: It has been rightfully pointed out that this is a bit of a cranky post. I didn't make clear my intention. Maybe someone can recommend some recent small mobile games, like card or sudoku or something, that aren't pay to win. I am aware of one: Good Sudoku.
12 votes -
Embracer has entered a $1.2 billion agreement to divest mobile developer Easybrain to digital entertainment firm Miniclip
10 votes -
Mindless games, preferably mobile
I'm looking for something to keep me busy / focused on with minimal actual concentration, planning or learning required. Things that you can't look away from while playing or you lose what you're...
I'm looking for something to keep me busy / focused on with minimal actual concentration, planning or learning required. Things that you can't look away from while playing or you lose what you're doing. Nothing that involves interaction with other people.
Things that have worked for me for this in the past are Bejeweled 3 lightening mode, Insaniquarium, driving around mindlessly in Forza Horizons.
I'm kind of terrible at anything that requires twitch reflexes, so anything that punishes you for slowness isn't great. Bejeweled it's not a problem because the game is basically identical no matter how you score.
26 votes -
Striking New York Times tech workers ask people not to play Wordle or other NYT games
26 votes -
Scientists and archivists worry Epic Games' control of the 3D model market will 'destroy' cultural heritage
35 votes -
DEATH NOTE Killer Within | Announcement trailer
13 votes -
The Foundations of Magic's next era
14 votes -
Diffusion for World Modeling - CS:GO and other games rendered in real time using neural networks
7 votes -
Using Dungeons and Dragons as a group therapy tool
12 votes -
US judge rules Google must give rival third-party app stores access to the full catalog of Google Play apps — and distribute third-party stores
56 votes -
Keyboard Warriors: Knights of Chalacyn - Gaming documentary
4 votes -
Magic the Gathering: On the future of Commander
22 votes -
Slow Roads - Endless Driving Zen
13 votes -
Balatro Mobile coming to Google Play, Apple Arcade and App Store on September 26th 2024
40 votes -
Magic: The Gathering ban and restricted announcement
20 votes -
Gametje
27 votes -
SpaceTraders — A unique multiplayer game built on a free Web API
62 votes -
Cards Against Humanity sues SpaceX, alleges “invasion” of land on US/Mexico border
114 votes -
Tiny Glade | Release date trailer – 23rd September 2024
18 votes -
P8go
25 votes -
The new Flappy Bird game has a hidden secret; crypto
24 votes -
Retrospective on the introduction of the Vanguard anti-cheat software to League of Legends
16 votes -
Oxenfree will be completely removed from Itch.io next month
21 votes -
Star Wars Outlaws is a crappy masterpiece
34 votes -
nematode farm — a web game where the opponent AI is an actual simulation of the nervous system of C. elegans
28 votes -
The secret inside One Million Checkboxes
65 votes -
PhD Simulator
26 votes -
Winter Burrow | Twenty minutes of gameplay
5 votes -
Cyberpunk 2077 breach protocol autosolver
14 votes -
Behold, Diablo is fully playable in your browser
34 votes -
AltStore PAL drops its annual subscription thanks to a grant from Epic
8 votes -
1,500 slot machines walk into a bar: adventures in quantity over quality
13 votes -
Making games for Apple platforms "like an abusive relationship", say developers
42 votes -
Epic's new game strategy for mobile stores
15 votes -
If Minecraft was a rhythm game | Clean Bandit - Higher feat. iann dior
15 votes -
Generating sudokus for fun and no profit
26 votes -
10,000-hour indie RPG goes free-to-play as devs aren't comfortable making "tens of thousands of dollars from people who don't play the game"
34 votes -
The best games of 2024 so far, picked by the NPR staff
33 votes -
Intravenous - Free on Steam!
https://store.steampowered.com/app/1486630/Intravenous/ This game is a fun high intensity stealth game, it feels like a top down splinter cell game.
40 votes -
Do any Tilderinos play Flesh and Blood the TCG?
Flesh and Blood is a trading card game (think Yugioh, Magic: the Gathering, Pokemon, etc) which only launched in 2020 but has been rapidly gaining popularity across the world. If you’re familiar...
Flesh and Blood is a trading card game (think Yugioh, Magic: the Gathering, Pokemon, etc) which only launched in 2020 but has been rapidly gaining popularity across the world.
If you’re familiar with other trading card games, this has some key differences in the pace of the games. Usually, players have limited resources to begin with, and build up resources throughout the game. In FaB, however, players start at their strongest with the most access to resources, and slowly exhaust these resources as the game goes on.
I played MtG casually for a bit over a decade, and I have a number of friends who all enjoy the Commander format. I never had the skills or budget to play in tournaments, but that’s never been my thing anyway.
I’m just curious if there are many other players here on Tildes.
If you play, which classes or heroes to you prefer? What do you think of the way the game has been managed so far? Do you play casually or are you more ambitious than that? Do you play online or do you stick to exclusively in-person games? How did you get into the game, did you play other TCGs before or is FaB your first foray?
8 votes -
Meeplegate - Drama in the board game industry
12 votes -
One Million Checkboxes - a silly little game where (un)checking a box (un)checks it for everyone
49 votes -
The Hamster Kombat crypto app that’s spreading through desperate Iran
6 votes -
Wikipedia's Philosophy game: A breakdown, and how someone broke it
10 votes -
Game and programming exercise based on The Prisoner's Dilemma (need Beta Testers)
19 votes