Thursday, January 21, 2016

Liberators Review

Liberators is the latest in Mutant Box lineup of MMO strategy games for the browser. His style of play is virtually identical to previous MutantBox games like Soldiers Inc. and Storm case, with its ancient Greek setting far being the main difference. Like the other games before, Liberators combines city-building through military conquest. As your city grows and your alliances with other city-states, knowledge of technology and offensive force.

The game begins with a surprising alliance with Leonidas himself. Despite how busy you expect the King of Liberators, want to be with the incoming Persian forces in order, he is dedicated to ensure that your small town is becoming a worthy and capable of defending Greece , This process involves checking off a very long list of Leonidas assigned missions. Most missions are very simple, which is why there are so many of them. Generally, missions will ask you to build with another Greek city or upgrade a building fake, or to train strengthen an alliance or military units.


Liberators


Your city requires a constant stream of wheat, bronze and wood to support its rapid growth and growing army. There are a number of resources dedicated buildings for production, storage; Your saved resources are safe from the invading player. Beyond resources building, there are a number of buildings dedicated to your economic and military. Each building provides access to some new functionality, like the ability to communicate with other players or a training ground for Spy units acting resources. The first few hours of the game include constant and rapid progress. Unfortunately construction building after building after building is not very funny, so this is quite boring from time.

Building a good tutorial is hard - you need the player to learn and to understand the mechanics of the game, but you are too busy to keep order. A long, boring tutorial means plenty of players will never make it to the meat of the game; and that's definitely the case with Liberators. You have 72 hours from the time you start the game had to be completely safe from invasions from high level players. While technically gain autonomy after the first handful of assignments Leonidas', is the best use of your time to keep plowing through them. Ensure loops through its list of your town, has all of the buildings, upgrades and intercity agreement you need, when you disappear your freshman shield.

The free-to-play and full game of the timer. That is, there is so much to do that you may be constantly busy for the first few hours of the game, and then you will not be a problem filling if you have to check on your city at regular intervals for at least twenty minutes of gameplay. Obviously, the rarer your city you check, the more you will have to do. In addition to improving your city with new buildings and updating of existing buildings, you can have an entire army and maintain your relationships with other cities.

In fact, Liberators gives you plenty to do, but it rarely feels very satisfying and it takes too long to the point where you really easy to get your own decisions. Loops through the gigantic mission list honestly not fun. The tutorial is stimulated appropriately, so that you can properly learn the ins and outs of the game, but there is hardly anything more exciting what is happening, making it all feel at the end really boring. Construction of buildings, alliances and workouts are not a prior problematic check boxes on a long to-do list, but they're so many of the check boxes that lands to the fun part of the game behind hours what is hidden on a tutorial to represent. Of course, gradual progress of the way the city-builder. You start from scratch and slowly build up a city. Your options and strength grows with your city.

2 comments:

  1. do not play this game, its full of bugs I haven't been able to log on for 2 weeks cuz servers down.... they take ur money and do nothing for it in return.

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  2. Game is simple but fun for what it is, problem is support don't fix problems very quickly, reply problems or even payments promptly when things go wrong. Your better off looking for a better game, where dev's actually give a damn instead of just sucking cash out of you for extremely poor service.

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