![]() ![]() It’s fun to play and offers many additional challenges like polygonal tables, so you can practice your skills and earn additional “currency” if you do well. I dont know about you but it doesnt feel good clicking on give up constantly throughout the day just cause i dont want to use crystals to continue… This is a poor way of getting people to spend crystals by attacking their self esteem. And after you click give up, it then asks if you are sure, so you have to click give up again. Most annoying of all is when you are participating in a challenge and strike out, it gives you the option of paying crystals to continue or - get this - “give up”. Lots of bots, there are days where you will play with bots all day, and they all play the same way so its easy to tell.ĥ. Graphical interface slows everything down, you have to wait for things to pop up and sometimes click multiple times before it activates what you’re clicking on cause the graphical videos have to play (offers/stars being added etc)Ĥ. Crashes/disconnections - not too often but it is annoying cause it takes 1-2 minutes of your timeģ. Glitches, balls disappear during gameplayĢ. There are some issues you would have to put up with though.ġ. Gotta say Infinity8Ball is better than most. Love pool, i come from the age old yahoo pool era. Suggestion: get pool players to help design instead of slot machine designers. As it is, it’s occasional fun fluff with way too many distractions. Make rewards for winning games money and experience only, which you can spend on chalks, cues, tournament entries, etc. ![]() Lose 90% of the rewards system (Wheel of fortune? Bingo? Daily? Journey? Star rewards? It’s all waaaay too much) and 20% of side games and you’d have a really solid game. I know they want to lure you into spending money or watching ads, and that’s fine, but do it in a way that makes sense. There are gold, gems, blue square, blue hexagons, cue parts (including conch tears, wine of Dionysus, and a Japanese paper fan? Like ZERO internal logic or consistency), and chalks, among other strange, incongruous things to keep track of (hint, I don’t… I have no idea what most of those do or how I’m earning them). You end up spending more time “opening chests” (why are there treasure chests? This isn’t a pirate game) than playing the game. Unfortunately it’s almost ruined by all the stupid “rewards”. This is a good game with a good mechanic that’s fun to play. I could go on but I'm annoyed now just writing this. Hope you guys take these comments and make changes that make you want to play the game. Like I said, it's ok but it could be A LOT better. I may just find another pool game that keeps it simple. If I clicked No or close, that's what I meant. Pop ups to purchase are annoying and the are you sure prompt (another click) is equally as annoying. If my reward is to tap my way to early arthritis then this game does that. The reward playing this game is almost non existent. Don't tell me sink 20 more balls for a spin but then that spin costs more coins. You can eventually get the 200 gems if you spend 12,000 or more coins to spin. That will take quite some time to complete. Currently there is an award for obtaining 300 gems. Why would I purchase 2000 coins for 100 gems. For example in challenges I win one of three games and in order to claim the prize I need to pay 100 gems. If the game asks me to use a wildcard, I just do it as I have no idea how it works. The ASA issued a warning to Playorcas to make sure future ads are “socially responsible” and do not cause offense.Like other reviews, the accumulation of cards and pieces makes no sense. Rovio said the ad may have been miscategorized, allowing it to bypass its own ad blockers, which stop ads with partial nudity or sexual content from appearing in its games. In place of reaching Playorcas, the ASA consulted the developer of Angry Birds 2, Rovio, which was unable to identify what network served the ad. The company's inaction hasn’t gone down well with the watchdog, which called out Playcoras’ “apparent disregard” for its rules. Playcoras, which also makes the games Extreme Tennis and Infinity Fishing, is yet to respond to the ASA’s inquiry. The ASA acknowledged that the ad was only “mildly sexually suggestive,” but condemned it for objectifying women as its sole purpose was to “titillate viewers.” The woman was superimposed over a pool table with the words “Play Now.” The ad featured an animated woman with a pool cue wearing a cowboy hat, who had her breasts partially exposed. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |