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    Infinity Blade

    Game » consists of 2 releases. Released Dec 09, 2010

    Infinity Blade is the first iOS game to use the Unreal Engine. The game pits players against a variety of massive foes on a quest to slay the God King.

    stepwiseduchess's Infinity Blade (iPhone) review

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    • Score:
    • stepwiseduchess wrote this review on .
    • 1 out of 2 Giant Bomb users found it helpful.
    • This review received 1 comments

    Hours of Fun!

    Infinity Blade is one of the scarce games for iPhone/iPad which actually feels like a genuine game and does not look like it was developed in Flash. Can be credited to its use of the Unreal Engine. Although the game itself does not include much narrative content, it cleverly loops and encourages many play throughs or what they call "Bloodlines" for hours of character progression and fun. The combat system is very intricate, considering it is an iPhone/iPad game, and difficult to master, but this might be due to a lack of diverse combat movements. Many of the enemy attacks are similar, making it difficult to defend from. Infinity Blade is a little expensive, but it is worth the price because it is a game you will enjoy playing for hours and hours.

    Other reviews for Infinity Blade (iPhone)

      Infinitely Addictive 0

      Unreal Engine, this is a name synonymous with gamers. It's a game engine that was developed by Epic Games and was first used for Unreal back in 1998 and it's third iteration is used in todays games. A couple of the titles you might recognise currently running off Unreal Engine 3 are: Batman: Arkham Asylum & Arkham City, Gears of War 1-3 & Mass Effect 1-3. So to hear that this very same engine was being used in an iPhone game was surprising to say the least. Now if you own an iPhone and a...

      31 out of 33 found this review helpful.

      Infinity Blade Review 0

      Ever since Apple catapulted mobile gaming into the limelight some years ago, the successes of these games have continued to grow exponentially. Today it is common place to see plush toys of games like angry birds on store shelves, or the odd person wandering the halls of gaming conventions wearing a cone on their head (A’la Plants Vs Zombies). Throughout these releases though, there was one question that remained on the lips of enthusiasts. Sure these games were successful and in many cases fun,...

      0 out of 0 found this review helpful.

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