(Wan to buy the following? Just click the games name and you will straightly be navigated to iTunes!)
Top 5 Latest PAID iPhone GAMES:
1.
Angry Birds Rio
The newest chapter in the blockbuster mobile franchise, Angry Birds Rio, is built solidly on the foundation that has garnered – according to Rovio – over 100 million downloads since late 2009. Yet enough is different here to keep Angry Birds Rio from feeling like nothing more than a dressed up extension of the same game.Surely, you know the basics of Angry Birds. You slingshot a gaggle of otherwise flightless birds into structures, breaking them apart with their sometimes-special powers, like the blue bird that breaks apart into three little chicks or the black bomb bird. Angry Birds Rio initiates a temporary cease fire with the pigs of past chapters and instead draws inspiration from the upcoming animated movie, Rio. Instead of smashing into piggies, the heroes must break open caged tropical birds, eventually freeing the Blu and Jewel, the stars of Rio. In the back half of Angry Birds Rio, the ire of the birds turns on a band of monkeys.
Trailer : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-7gIpfrQdAI
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2.
Stupidness 2 PRO
Stupidness 2 PRO is a puzzle game for the iPhone, iPod Touch, and the iPad. The app poses questions that seem very simple, but often require the user to think outside of the box. This often involves using the iPhone's internal gyroscope and multitouch functionality. However, some solutions are nonsensical and seem deliberately meant to frustrate rather than test your IQ.Screenshots:
3.
Fruit Ninja
Half Brick Studios just released a simple but challenging casual game called Fruit Ninja.
The game is a simple affair that has you swiping at the screen to dismember pieces of fruit that are lobbed in your general direction.
It's a bit of a shooting-gallery type experience but one you are swiping to slice rather than tapping to shoot. You're only allowed to miss 3 pieces of fruit before it's game over — but beware, slicing a single bomb (thrown up randomly) will result in an instant game over.
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4.
Angry Birds
Angry Birds is a game that doesn't even pretend to have a story, and I really appreciate that. The full intro to the game is a single picture which illustrates some green pigs stealing eggs from a variety of birds. Naturally, the only way for the birds to vindicate this atrocity is to launch themselves from a slingshot in a suicidal attempt to take the lives of as many pigs as possible. I like to think that because the pigs are green this is some sort of swine-flu revenge fantasy, but it's likely that there's zero credence to that idea.
Angry Birds Trailer:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bNNzRyd1xz0
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5.
Cut the Rope
Cut the Rope begins with a brief cut scene showing a mysterious package left at your door with a label on it that clearly reads "feed with candy." Inside you find a hungry green creature known as "Om Nom" who has an insatiable desire for candy… which oddly enough is suspended inside of his box with an odd array of ropes. Feeding Om Nom through the 100 included levels is a task that is easier said than done once you get past the tutorial portion of the game– especially if you're looking to clear each level with three stars.Cut The Rope Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-1gf5UdYHwg&feature=player_embedded
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iPhone Game of The Week
Gears
First things first: Gears is gorgeous. Crescent Moon has worked some serious mojo on the graphics here, which are entirely rendered in 3D and utilize a fantasy/steampunk theme that suits the game well. Retina Display equipped devices will be treated to high resolution visuals, and there are additional special enhancements for the extra power of the iPad 2. Also, owners of older devices can choose from different levels of graphical quality to increase performance if need be. No matter which device you're playing on, Gears looks spectacular with a ton of detail and impressive effects throughout.
The campaign in Gears consists of 27 levels spread across 3 different themed worlds with 9 levels apiece. Each level has a set number of power gears to collect on your way to the finish. It’s not necessary to collect them all, though higher scores and thus better medals are awarded based on how many you do manage to pick up. The levels are all really well designed, and the type of terrain you must traverse is what really sets Gears apart from other ball rolling games. Levels are rife with moving gears (naturally), stairs, narrow bridges, trampolines, gates, exploding boxes, and various other obstacles that can impede your progress.
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