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Crush the Castle

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Crush the Castle
Developer(s)Joey Betz and Chris "ConArtist" Condon[1]
Publisher(s)Armor Games
Platform(s)PC, Mac, iPhone, iPod Touch, Android
ReleaseApril 28, 2009[1]
Genre(s)Action
Mode(s)Single-player

Crush the Castle is a physics Flash game developed by Armor Games. The Flash version was released on April 28, 2009, and versions for the iPhone and iPod Touch were released on January 19, 2010. Notable for its "flinging" game mechanic, which influenced the popular mobile game Angry Birds,[2] the goal of Crush the Castle is to kill all inhabitants of various castles by using a trebuchet to fling large rocks or bombs. A sequel, Crush the Castle 2, has similar gameplay, but features new maps and power-ups.

Gameplay

The goal of the game is to kill all inhabitants of various castles by using a trebuchet to fling large rocks or bombs. Players are able to create and destroy their own designs of castles as well.

Crush the Castle 2

Crush the Castle 2 is similar, but features new maps, new power-ups and a revamped level builder. New things to fire from the trebuchet are greek fire, ice grenades, jars full of electric eels, and a mysterious purple flask that creates a small black hole.[3] In addition, structural components can be disintegrated.

Here, that'll follow each of the new asset in-game for Crush the Castle 2.

Greek Fire

A fire from an ancient God.

The small amount of the same might incinerate any wood material.

It's way more efficient against wood material.

Therefore, the incineration may be less or none eficient with other material.

Greek Fire's incineration process is a continuous state, considerating the incinerated material and it's position.

The process may be quicker, slower or with no process of incineration at all.

Ice Bomb

It's an ice bomb bottled in a potion glassery.

Trebuchet'll use it for reduce the structure's resistance and defense.

Therefore, it'll be more proper to suffer an fatal damage who'm may danificate part of or the structure's entirety.

Ice Bomb'll freeze anything, being so people or structure.

It's a freezing effect to a large area, depending on the angle of the trebuchet.

Electric Fishing

It's a double-fish with a electrical property.

The same is able to eletrify the totality of an structure, being the same an metallic one.

That potion can give fatal damage by eletrocuting someone with one-shot.

The animation is the quicker one, consisting in fatal damage, the person'll be turned in a skeleton before death.

Acidic Cube

That's gathered in the final stage of the game.

Also with a continuous damage, that potion'll deintegrate each thing that may gather contact with, without a exception.

Therefore, it's ensuring to say that the same potion'll take longer or slower to deintegrate certain structure. It's also ensuring that the same structure will be desintegrated, not materring the time of deintegration of the same, since it's 100% of chance that it's desintegrable.

Mysterious Potion

That's an in-game accomplishimentbeing so, if the player get all golden medal in each stage throught gameplay.

The accomplishiment is called ''Into the Void'' and the description say ''???''.

That mysterious potion create an void to nonethless, by teleporting the structure and people on it.

After gathering enough energy, the void'll implode itself, repeling everything it has catched on it, granting massive debris damage around the stage.

Development

The developers cite the game Castle Clout, released October 4, 2008 by Liam Bowmers, as their inspiration.[1][4] Armor Games requested and received permission from Bowmers to use his ideas for the development of Crush the Castle.[1]

Reception

IGN's Jeffrey Haynes called the game "surprisingly deep and fun for such a simple premise."[5] Joystiq's Justin McElroy stated "It's a simple mechanic, but it's hard to deny that's it's satisfying."[6] GameZebo's Stephen Greenwell rated it 2/5 stars, stating it is "easy to pick up and play", but has "very repetitive gameplay" and "lackluster visuals and sounds".[7] IGN's Levi Buchanan rated it 7/10, stating "If you like physics-based puzzle games, this really is one of the best."[8] Kotaku's Brian Crecente said, "I've grown quite fond of Crush the Castle."[9] Gamasutra's Christopher Hyde listed Crush the Castle in his list of "The 99 Best Free Games Of 2009".[10]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Joey Betz (2009-04-28). "Production Notes: Crush the Castle". Archived from the original on 2010-11-19. Retrieved 2011-03-06.
  2. ^ "Threes, clones and cornflakes: A view on 'casual games'". Gamasutra. 31 March 2014. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
  3. ^ "Another 101 Free Games 2010 from". 1UP. Archived from the original on 2011-06-29. Retrieved 2011-02-23.
  4. ^ Liam Bowmers (2008-10-04). "New Game - Feedback Requested". Archived from the original on 2012-12-17. Retrieved 2011-03-06.
  5. ^ Jeffrey Haynes (2009-08-11). "Jeff's Take on Crush the Castle - Web Games Feature at IGN". IGN. Archived from the original on 2011-06-29. Retrieved 2011-02-23.
  6. ^ McElroy, Justin (2010-01-28). "iPhone It In: Crush the Castle". Joystiq. Retrieved 2011-02-23.
  7. ^ "Crush the Castle Review". Gamezebo. 2009-12-31. Archived from the original on 2010-07-01. Retrieved 2011-02-23.
  8. ^ Levi Buchanan (2010-09-28). "Crush the Castle Android Review - Android Review at IGN". IGN. Archived from the original on 2011-07-13. Retrieved 2011-02-23.
  9. ^ Brian Crecente (Feb 4, 2010). "Crush The Castle Micro-Review: Fun With Trebuchets". Kotaku. Retrieved 2011-02-23.
  10. ^ "News - Opinion: The 99 Best Free Games Of 2009". Gamasutra. Retrieved 2011-02-23.

External links