

It's dastardly tricky - and tremendously satisfying. Secondly, it's not long before the placement of the orbs, as well as the layout of the track, starts to vary, meaning that you are, essentially, running two completely different tracks at once. Firstly, the orbs can be tucked away in tricky corners, which makes navigation difficult even on one track, never mind two at the same time. The idea is to place both thumbs on the screen, using them to simultaneously steer two discrete pads along two tracks, collecting power orbs, 50 per level. The core of Dual Survivor is multi-tasking.
#Tengami has stopped working for android#
There is a copycat called Fives doing the rounds on Google Play, but if you can wait - and we'd recommend you do, because copycats suck - Threes! will be available for Android soon. It's worth noting that Threes! is not yet available for Android. Although it may well go higher than that. The idea, of course, is to get the number higher and higher, until you hit the highest number achievable in the game - 6144 - on a four-by-four grid. Your base units are twos and ones, which you can push together to create a three from there, you have to place matching numbers next to each other, then push them together to create a single, doubled number. The premise of Threes! is pretty simple: pair matching numbers, starting with threes.
#Tengami has stopped working full#
You can read our full review of Oquonie here. It's a puzzle in every sense of the word - deeply confusing, deeply clever and deeply engrossing. In Oquonie, you have to navigate the strange, labyrinthine spaces, where everyone speaks a strange language of symbols, trying to unlock enough information to find the way forward.

And all the while, you have no way of knowing if what you seek is truly the way home.ĭavid Mondou-Labbe, better known as Aliceffekt, doesn't make games for the faint of heart: each one is an exercise in going somewhere completely new.

You have to carefully manoeuvre through dangerous situations and manage resources as you navigate the stars - because if your astronaut dies, it's game over. It tells the tale of an astronaut who wakes from cryosleep to find that he's no longer in orbit around Earth - in fact, he has no idea where he is, and has only unreliable alien technology as a guide home. We have plenty of space-themed games on the list this week, but if it's depth you want, Out There is it. You can read our full review of Tengami here. The narrative isn't especially deep, but sometimes an exercise in aesthetic wonder is enough in and of itself. Based on pop-up books and set in a sort of mythical feudal Japan, it sees you exploring a gorgeous paper world, solving puzzles based on the mechanics of pop-up books: pulling tabs and folding pages to explore the world and find the fallen cherry blossom to return it to its tree. If you like games that are as much about atmosphere and art as they are about gameplay, Tengami should be on your list. Looking for a new game to play on your mobile device? Here's our pick of the best released in February 2014.
