![]() There’s still something pulling me to the game, though, so I’ll play until it stops being enjoyable. It takes so many copies of a rare character to level it up that I’m not sure it will ever happen. That said, the gacha system is still obscene. So it’s been manageable so far as long as I take breaks. I’ve now got two 3-star characters and a full team of level 60 characters with one at level 80. I find that it helps to take a day or two off from actually playing and just collect the idle rewards. But there was something compelling about it and I stuck with it. I started playing the new Stranger Things match-three game last week and swore off it when I got stalled because I couldn’t level my characters to get past the next wave of enemies. Anyway, check out my gameplay video below if you want to see it in action. I do wish it had iCloud sync, though, because I started playing on my iPad and it’s the perfect one-handed game. I’ll definitely be back to play more of those. Each character has their own set of puzzles and I’ve almost completed the first one. My favorite is the puzzle mode, though, which gives you a specific layout and goal and a set number of moves to complete it in. I appreciate that, because the controls can be a bit finicky when you’re trying to move quickly. Luckily, there are several different modes, some with a timer and some with a move limit. Combined with the overly dramatic pixel font that bothers my eyes, I basically just skimmed through the story to get to the puzzle part. ![]() ![]() So far, I played through the story mode with one character, but I was not impressed with the writing. It’s an interesting variation on the matching genre with a lot of room for strategy. When a match clears, it also pushes the flowers next it away from it, so you can try and use that to set up chain reactions. More flowers keep coming and could get in your way, so you have to be careful not to let the whole board fill up. The goal is to match two or more of a color, but they have to actually hit each other, not just land next to each other. I really like the gameplay, which consists of sliding colored flowers in one of four directions until it hits a wall or another flower. Petal Crash is a matching puzzle game with a twist that first released on PC last year but just made its way over to mobile. Overall, I enjoyed it and would recommend it to FMV fans who don’t mind a little gore - and some groan-worthy jokes. I’m not sure it lives up to everything it could have been, but I do want to play through it again to see if I can get a different ending. I played through the game once so far and it’s good campy fun with a message. So it became a way to exploit those desperate for a better life. It started off just for death row inmates, but in time they started letting anyone join. It takes place in a future where the most popular series is a reality show where fifty competitors are dropped on a remote island to kill each other. It’s a tongue-in-cheek look at what would happen if battle royale games like Fortnite or even The Hunger Games were real. These last couple of weeks have been dream come true for FMV or interactive movie fans, and Wales Interactive’s Bloodshore is the latest release. Anyway, there’s a lot to cover, so pull up a chair and let’s begin! Bloodshore I also got sucked into the Stranger Things game, even though I swore I was done with it. ![]() I finished a full playthrough of Poe and Munro, as well as Jessika. This was a bit of a quiet week as far as new games go, so I spent most of my time catching up on games from last week. Hi everyone, and welcome back to My Week Unwrapped, where I discuss all the games I’ve been playing over the last seven days. ![]()
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