Something went wrong. Try again later

MMMman

This user has not updated recently.

136 127 0 9
Forum Posts Wiki Points Following Followers

Windows Phone is great. Unless you like playing compelling games

Batman owns a Windows Phone. So do I. I saw him last week and he told me of his disappointment at the lack of good games for him to play. He does like being able to turn his Xbox on with his phone, though.

No Caption Provided

“Batman has the Lumia 900” said Shauna the sales assistant “its Batman’s phone”. “What will he do if I buy it then?” I asked churlishly “surely I’d get in the way of, nay hinder, his important work?” “It has the logo on the back, that’s all”. “Then I definitely don’t want it” I said “I imagined Batman would have a more exciting phone, I’ll just take the regular one please.” This was how my adventure with a Windows Phone began. How I embarked down a road I, and seemingly very few people, had travelled before. A journey that was set to be thrilling and fascinating in equal parts; one that would almost certainly be as full of games as it was excitement and the unknown. It had Xbox Live on it after all.

The thought of seeing my avatar on my phone whenever I wanted set my heart a flutter. Being able to pour over all of my achievements and show them to my friends in real life also appealed to me tremendously. There had been countless social occasions where I had been just dying to show off my gaming prowess to new acquaintances, though without the evidence I had declined lest I be labelled a fraud. With my Live profile in hand I would no longer be that guy in the corner at parties, no, I would be centre stage, basking in the adoration I would inevitably receive, chest bursting with pride being flanked by beautiful and envious people. The Windows Phone had already completed me and I had yet to play a single game.

Minesweeper. That perennial of any true gamer’s collection was my first foray into post-millennial mobile entertainment. Not only had it seen a stunningly minimalist graphical update, think the beautiful offspring of Lumines and Picross, but it had also been gifted with achievements. Modern games are, after all, less about playing the game in hand and more about playing the game of playing the game; the meta game as it is often called. Achievements are awarded for completing challenges in Minesweeper, such as playing a single game of it, and the player is then awarded points for being a diligent participant. The more Minesweeper one plays the more points can be earned and so the actual act of playing became secondary to my quest for more points. Being able to earn achievements while away from my Xbox was a revelation, it didn’t matter that what I was playing was as old as time or that the game clock was hugely obtrusive; I was levelling up and the progress was comforting.

Knowing that I didn’t actually have to actually like the games that I played was tremendously liberating. I commute almost every day but having to worry about quality could easily have eaten into my playing time. Instead, all I had to do was look for Live certified games to know that my enjoyment was guaranteed, however tangential that enjoyment proved to be. The breadth of titles and mechanics was astounding. There was a game where you had to roll things across platforms into holes. Great. Another where platforms had to be moved to get something into a hole, this one looked a bit like Limbo to boot. Even better. I found another where you have to direct oil with platforms to get it from one hole to the next. Shrieks of “Holy diversity, Batman”, or something along those lines, have been heard echoing around the Batcave recently, I’m sure.

No Caption Provided

Cavities aren’t the only preoccupation of Windows Phone games though, oh no. Not every title was comfortable exploring the dark recesses of the human psyche, some aimed for levity, reminding me of the unbridled joy to be found in unpretentious entertainment. Tiki Towers tasked me with building platforms out of bamboo and coconuts (how delightfully quaint), so cheeky monkeys could reach deliciously ripe bananas floating in the air. It mattered not that the game featured little to no bona fide Tiki sculpture; its charm was down right infectious. Besides, Monkey Mechanics or Banana and Bamboo Building don’t really convey the same breezy personality.

Similarly, while I cannot fault the noble intentions of the developer, growing monkey malnutrition is a real issue that needs more exposure, the limitations of a small touch screen interface cannot be ignored, however minor their impact upon my enjoyment. The titular towers are constructed by dragging bamboo trusses with a finger. This functions admirably when building simple structures but becomes imprecise when the monkeys demand more complex assistance. Adding to a tower can often end in precarious results as unsafe appendages are constructed accidentally, rather than the sturdy Babel-esque monument of intention. I found myself spending vital time deconstructing and rebuilding unforeseen errors while my monkeys withered and died. One particularly fateful level saw five generations of the same family expire, 37 monkeys in total, and led me to cease playing forever. While Tiki Towers was outwardly frivolous it carried with it an important message; mobile games are often unsuited to their platform, though if players are bribed with achievement points they will often persevere for longer than they otherwise would have.

As a side note; my final and most meaningful gripe is that the game features imagery resembling the Statue of Liberty from Planet of the Apes. Tiki Towers clearly features monkeys, simians that are not featured in the film or any of its sequels. As such, this anachronism is an unforgivable and lazy way of repurposing a well known cultural image.

No Caption Provided

After putting up with less than stellar titles for the sake of vapid showboating I decided to run an experiment. My hypothesis was thus; Microsoft happily grants Live status to, in my opinion, sub par games therefore independent efforts must be even less worthy of my attention. Most of my findings vindicated my initial thoughts, especially one game where I had to burrow a tractor underground in search of watches and rocks. The premise and goals were arbitrary and silly but it was the unresponsive controls that killed the experience. Movement was floaty and imprecise and led me to ditch my tractor underground and dig myself out by hand. As it happens I came across a couple of old Timex jobbies and sold them for a tidy profit, so the endeavour was not a complete loss.

I reinvested these precious pennies into what emerged as my overall, and possibly only, winner in this quest to uncover a Legitimately Compelling Windows Phone Game. CastleMine is not thematically ambitions, nor is it mechanically diverse. It is, however, singular in its game play intentions, focused and incredibly well suited to a small screen. It is a tower defence game with hints of Dungeon Keeper and a surprisingly robust skill progression system. Instead of playing out on either a set path or blank canvas, players must dig a single tunnel into a play area measuring only five squares across. As the tunnel extends downwards it unleashes waves of enemies that must be dispatched with the player’s fortifications. These weapons can be upgraded and assisted by buff towers that grant bonuses and improve chances of survival. At the end of each level the player gains experience based on their success, allowing them to invest in permanent upgrades to towers, resource collection, survivability and a number of other ancillary abilities.

No Caption Provided

While nothing CastleMine offers sounds particularly inspired on paper, its solid execution and well managed difficulty curve made it my go to title whenever I was out. The upgrade system provides a tangible reason to continue playing what is a relatively repetitive style of game, without resorting to introducing new features every couple of levels as so many mobile games do. Unlike the Live achievements which value perseverance over any real skill, CastleMine rewards players for their successes with a means to further improve their game, not simple trinkets. The game also embraces the touch screen fully and works to both its strengths and weaknesses, eliminating the need for precise or speedy inputs and allowing the player to feel in control at all times. It is for these reasons that I appreciate it and have spent countless hours on the train enjoying its simple yet refined mechanics.

There still aren’t many truly good mobile games available. There are even less on Windows Phone. Microsoft appears to have missed the point in putting Xbox Live into a mobile phone. Yes, I can access my profile, achievements, messages and all that other stuff I never use when I’m sat at home, what I can’t do is play many good games, the one thing I most closely associate with the Xbox brand. Developing for a touch screen needs arguably more thought than developing for a controller. Input needs to be simple and responsive and this should be reflected within the mechanics of a title. Building a tower so a monkey can reach a banana is a great (?) pitch for a game until the finished product mechanically prevents me from easily accomplishing the simple goal. Giving me five achievement points won’t divert my attention away from bad controls, but it might in time spoil my confidence in Microsoft’s attempts at quality control. Windows Phone gaming is largely a ghetto at the moment. Good curation and promotion on merit, rather than publisher ties, is the best way to improve the social standing of the service, not sugar-coating the creative poverty like a bad politician.

18 Comments

19 Comments

Avatar image for mmmman
MMMman

136

Forum Posts

127

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By MMMman

Batman owns a Windows Phone. So do I. I saw him last week and he told me of his disappointment at the lack of good games for him to play. He does like being able to turn his Xbox on with his phone, though.

No Caption Provided

“Batman has the Lumia 900” said Shauna the sales assistant “its Batman’s phone”. “What will he do if I buy it then?” I asked churlishly “surely I’d get in the way of, nay hinder, his important work?” “It has the logo on the back, that’s all”. “Then I definitely don’t want it” I said “I imagined Batman would have a more exciting phone, I’ll just take the regular one please.” This was how my adventure with a Windows Phone began. How I embarked down a road I, and seemingly very few people, had travelled before. A journey that was set to be thrilling and fascinating in equal parts; one that would almost certainly be as full of games as it was excitement and the unknown. It had Xbox Live on it after all.

The thought of seeing my avatar on my phone whenever I wanted set my heart a flutter. Being able to pour over all of my achievements and show them to my friends in real life also appealed to me tremendously. There had been countless social occasions where I had been just dying to show off my gaming prowess to new acquaintances, though without the evidence I had declined lest I be labelled a fraud. With my Live profile in hand I would no longer be that guy in the corner at parties, no, I would be centre stage, basking in the adoration I would inevitably receive, chest bursting with pride being flanked by beautiful and envious people. The Windows Phone had already completed me and I had yet to play a single game.

Minesweeper. That perennial of any true gamer’s collection was my first foray into post-millennial mobile entertainment. Not only had it seen a stunningly minimalist graphical update, think the beautiful offspring of Lumines and Picross, but it had also been gifted with achievements. Modern games are, after all, less about playing the game in hand and more about playing the game of playing the game; the meta game as it is often called. Achievements are awarded for completing challenges in Minesweeper, such as playing a single game of it, and the player is then awarded points for being a diligent participant. The more Minesweeper one plays the more points can be earned and so the actual act of playing became secondary to my quest for more points. Being able to earn achievements while away from my Xbox was a revelation, it didn’t matter that what I was playing was as old as time or that the game clock was hugely obtrusive; I was levelling up and the progress was comforting.

Knowing that I didn’t actually have to actually like the games that I played was tremendously liberating. I commute almost every day but having to worry about quality could easily have eaten into my playing time. Instead, all I had to do was look for Live certified games to know that my enjoyment was guaranteed, however tangential that enjoyment proved to be. The breadth of titles and mechanics was astounding. There was a game where you had to roll things across platforms into holes. Great. Another where platforms had to be moved to get something into a hole, this one looked a bit like Limbo to boot. Even better. I found another where you have to direct oil with platforms to get it from one hole to the next. Shrieks of “Holy diversity, Batman”, or something along those lines, have been heard echoing around the Batcave recently, I’m sure.

No Caption Provided

Cavities aren’t the only preoccupation of Windows Phone games though, oh no. Not every title was comfortable exploring the dark recesses of the human psyche, some aimed for levity, reminding me of the unbridled joy to be found in unpretentious entertainment. Tiki Towers tasked me with building platforms out of bamboo and coconuts (how delightfully quaint), so cheeky monkeys could reach deliciously ripe bananas floating in the air. It mattered not that the game featured little to no bona fide Tiki sculpture; its charm was down right infectious. Besides, Monkey Mechanics or Banana and Bamboo Building don’t really convey the same breezy personality.

Similarly, while I cannot fault the noble intentions of the developer, growing monkey malnutrition is a real issue that needs more exposure, the limitations of a small touch screen interface cannot be ignored, however minor their impact upon my enjoyment. The titular towers are constructed by dragging bamboo trusses with a finger. This functions admirably when building simple structures but becomes imprecise when the monkeys demand more complex assistance. Adding to a tower can often end in precarious results as unsafe appendages are constructed accidentally, rather than the sturdy Babel-esque monument of intention. I found myself spending vital time deconstructing and rebuilding unforeseen errors while my monkeys withered and died. One particularly fateful level saw five generations of the same family expire, 37 monkeys in total, and led me to cease playing forever. While Tiki Towers was outwardly frivolous it carried with it an important message; mobile games are often unsuited to their platform, though if players are bribed with achievement points they will often persevere for longer than they otherwise would have.

As a side note; my final and most meaningful gripe is that the game features imagery resembling the Statue of Liberty from Planet of the Apes. Tiki Towers clearly features monkeys, simians that are not featured in the film or any of its sequels. As such, this anachronism is an unforgivable and lazy way of repurposing a well known cultural image.

No Caption Provided

After putting up with less than stellar titles for the sake of vapid showboating I decided to run an experiment. My hypothesis was thus; Microsoft happily grants Live status to, in my opinion, sub par games therefore independent efforts must be even less worthy of my attention. Most of my findings vindicated my initial thoughts, especially one game where I had to burrow a tractor underground in search of watches and rocks. The premise and goals were arbitrary and silly but it was the unresponsive controls that killed the experience. Movement was floaty and imprecise and led me to ditch my tractor underground and dig myself out by hand. As it happens I came across a couple of old Timex jobbies and sold them for a tidy profit, so the endeavour was not a complete loss.

I reinvested these precious pennies into what emerged as my overall, and possibly only, winner in this quest to uncover a Legitimately Compelling Windows Phone Game. CastleMine is not thematically ambitions, nor is it mechanically diverse. It is, however, singular in its game play intentions, focused and incredibly well suited to a small screen. It is a tower defence game with hints of Dungeon Keeper and a surprisingly robust skill progression system. Instead of playing out on either a set path or blank canvas, players must dig a single tunnel into a play area measuring only five squares across. As the tunnel extends downwards it unleashes waves of enemies that must be dispatched with the player’s fortifications. These weapons can be upgraded and assisted by buff towers that grant bonuses and improve chances of survival. At the end of each level the player gains experience based on their success, allowing them to invest in permanent upgrades to towers, resource collection, survivability and a number of other ancillary abilities.

No Caption Provided

While nothing CastleMine offers sounds particularly inspired on paper, its solid execution and well managed difficulty curve made it my go to title whenever I was out. The upgrade system provides a tangible reason to continue playing what is a relatively repetitive style of game, without resorting to introducing new features every couple of levels as so many mobile games do. Unlike the Live achievements which value perseverance over any real skill, CastleMine rewards players for their successes with a means to further improve their game, not simple trinkets. The game also embraces the touch screen fully and works to both its strengths and weaknesses, eliminating the need for precise or speedy inputs and allowing the player to feel in control at all times. It is for these reasons that I appreciate it and have spent countless hours on the train enjoying its simple yet refined mechanics.

There still aren’t many truly good mobile games available. There are even less on Windows Phone. Microsoft appears to have missed the point in putting Xbox Live into a mobile phone. Yes, I can access my profile, achievements, messages and all that other stuff I never use when I’m sat at home, what I can’t do is play many good games, the one thing I most closely associate with the Xbox brand. Developing for a touch screen needs arguably more thought than developing for a controller. Input needs to be simple and responsive and this should be reflected within the mechanics of a title. Building a tower so a monkey can reach a banana is a great (?) pitch for a game until the finished product mechanically prevents me from easily accomplishing the simple goal. Giving me five achievement points won’t divert my attention away from bad controls, but it might in time spoil my confidence in Microsoft’s attempts at quality control. Windows Phone gaming is largely a ghetto at the moment. Good curation and promotion on merit, rather than publisher ties, is the best way to improve the social standing of the service, not sugar-coating the creative poverty like a bad politician.

Avatar image for justin258
Justin258

16684

Forum Posts

26

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 11

User Lists: 8

Edited By Justin258

When thinking about which phone I want next month (which is when I'm eligible for a cheapass upgrade), I surprisingly find that "gaming" isn't on my short list of priorities. I'd probably just play Angry Birds for five minutes every now and then and that's really all I would want to do on it, so if the games on Windows Phone suck then oh well. I don't really want a Windows Phone anyway.

Avatar image for toowalrus
toowalrus

13408

Forum Posts

29

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 3

Edited By toowalrus

I use an Xperia Play. I was playing Link to the Past on the can this morning.

Avatar image for handlas
handlas

3414

Forum Posts

18

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By handlas

there are a lot of great games on it. U wrong.

Avatar image for riostarwind
riostarwind

1401

Forum Posts

8479

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 206

User Lists: 62

Edited By riostarwind  Moderator

I use my lumia 900 for listening to podcasts more than playing a game on it. But I pretty much never buy apps on mobile devices. It's ether free or I think about it to much and never get it.

Avatar image for reverendhunt
reverendhunt

1190

Forum Posts

948735

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 52

User Lists: 11

Edited By reverendhunt

@handlas said:

there are a lot of great games on it. U wrong.

Such as...? If you disagree, back it up with something.

I've never touched a Windows Phone but from what I can tell most of the stuff looks like ports, ports, and more ports. Anything that is exclusive to WP doesn't look interesting that I've seen.

Avatar image for jkz
jkz

4287

Forum Posts

268

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 3

Edited By jkz

I was pondering going back to Android for a while, but I realised, I just like getting stuff done quickly when I'm using my phone, and I get stuff done quickest on Windows Phones; the lack of games was a thought for a couple days until I remembered I don't play games on my phone, because I don't like phone games. I figure I may as well stick with what works, and having spent 2 years on both iOS and Android, there aren't really many other new options available for me to try anyway.

Just glad the Spotify app is actually vaguely functional now. I can't afford to pay for two music services any more.

Avatar image for handlas
handlas

3414

Forum Posts

18

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By handlas

@ReverendHunt said:

@handlas said:

there are a lot of great games on it. U wrong.

Such as...? If you disagree, back it up with something.

I've never touched a Windows Phone but from what I can tell most of the stuff looks like ports, ports, and more ports. Anything that is exclusive to WP doesn't look interesting that I've seen.

I typed that form my Windows Phone... it was the best I could do ;)

There is a whole section of Microsoft published games under the Xbox Live section. I'm currently playing through Shoot 1UP which is a great game. It's top down aircraft shooter type game but you collect powerups that give you additional ships which then can connect a beam in between them and make a massive beam that shoots out. Pretty kewl. I've gotten up to 12 ships but there is an achievement for getting 30 ships which seems pretty difficult.

Also enjoyed playing Mush recently. Tentacles was a game I picked up when I first got a Windows Phone. There are several other demos I played which were good but I don't buy many phone games anyway but I have about as many Windows Phone games as I did on my iPhone. Windows Phone could benefit from having Hero's Academy.

Avatar image for wintersnowblind
WinterSnowblind

7599

Forum Posts

41

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 4

Edited By WinterSnowblind

The lack of apps seems like the biggest problem with Windows Phones at the moment, but with Windows 8 and Surface just being released, I imagine the situation is going to quickly become a lot better.

The lack of cross-platform support for the Xbox Live stuff is definitely disappointing though, that's something I really hope they focus on more. Having arcade games work between your desktop, phone and 360 would be hugely appealing.

Avatar image for catsakimbo
CatsAkimbo

805

Forum Posts

31

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 3

Edited By CatsAkimbo

So I'm curious, what games do you think you're missing out on? Even if you swapped your Windows Phone for an iPhone tomorrow, I don't think you'd open the floodgates to all this amazing, compelling content. Mobile games in general are mostly pretty crappy and hindered by small screens and limited controls.

Avatar image for lumley
lumley

1040

Forum Posts

1309

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 23

Edited By lumley

I've had a windows phone for the last 18 months and within the next few weeks I'll be getting an android phone.

The windows phone OS was really good apart from the apps - and especially the games.

Avatar image for mrredwine
MrRedwine

446

Forum Posts

131

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 4

Edited By MrRedwine

It has Civilization Revolution. What other game do you need?

Avatar image for mmmman
MMMman

136

Forum Posts

127

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By MMMman
@CatsAkimbo

So I'm curious, what games do you think you're missing out on? Even if you swapped your Windows Phone for an iPhone tomorrow, I don't think you'd open the floodgates to all this amazing, compelling content. Mobile games in general are mostly pretty crappy and hindered by small screens and limited controls.

@MrRedwine

It has Civilization Revolution. What other game do you need?

I feel touch screens, even capacitive ones, aren't serviced well by shoehorning controller based games onto them. Fidelity of input cannot be replicated by binary input; many console games depend upon analogue controls and this cannot be satisfactorily replicated on a phone screen. Similarly, precise movement is hard to implement with a touch screen. Many of the games I have experienced on Windows Phone, especially those that were Live accredited, seemed unsuited to the platform for the above reasons. I understand why Microsoft would want to diversify the Xbox brand for commercial reasons, though I feel poor quality control undermines the brand. Simply saying that most mobile games are shallow does not wash when a platform holder places their name on a release. Live Mobile is quickly becoming as meaningless as Games for Windows Live in terms of brand trust. Going forward Microsoft needs to assert more control to realign their name and reputation with quality products lest they risk losing consumer confidence; a name will only hold weight if it is consistently attached to quality products.
As for Civ Revolution; I do indeed own that title. I found it a worthy port of the franchise and agree that it delivers upon the lineage in an admirable way. I feel this is a very good example of a mobile game done perfectly. Turn based game play suits a touch screen and addresses the lack of one to one input. It plays really well from my limited experience, though I haven't played enough to discuss it in the article proper.
Avatar image for big_jon
big_jon

6533

Forum Posts

2539

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 18

Edited By big_jon

@ReverendHunt said:

@handlas said:

there are a lot of great games on it. U wrong.

Such as...? If you disagree, back it up with something.

I've never touched a Windows Phone but from what I can tell most of the stuff looks like ports, ports, and more ports. Anything that is exclusive to WP doesn't look interesting that I've seen.

No shit, I love my Windows phone, but it has like three good games.

Avatar image for maginnovision
maginnovision

819

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By maginnovision

I've had a windows phone since they came out, and I really don't game on phones much. I do play full house poker, revolution, solitaire game chest, wordament, sudoku, and geodefense though. I played puzzle quest 2 until I lost my saved game.I mainly use it for a phone that lasts all day without charging, being able to sync office documents(handy for my job, being a bmw tech), zune and messaging. My wife recently got one after being fed up with her samsung android phone. She mainly uses it as a phone though, which she complains alot less about than her android phone.

Avatar image for reverendhunt
reverendhunt

1190

Forum Posts

948735

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 52

User Lists: 11

Edited By reverendhunt

@handlas said:

@ReverendHunt said:

@handlas said:

there are a lot of great games on it. U wrong.

Such as...? If you disagree, back it up with something.

I've never touched a Windows Phone but from what I can tell most of the stuff looks like ports, ports, and more ports. Anything that is exclusive to WP doesn't look interesting that I've seen.

I typed that form my Windows Phone... it was the best I could do ;)

There is a whole section of Microsoft published games under the Xbox Live section. I'm currently playing through Shoot 1UP which is a great game. It's top down aircraft shooter type game but you collect powerups that give you additional ships which then can connect a beam in between them and make a massive beam that shoots out. Pretty kewl. I've gotten up to 12 ships but there is an achievement for getting 30 ships which seems pretty difficult.

Also enjoyed playing Mush recently. Tentacles was a game I picked up when I first got a Windows Phone. There are several other demos I played which were good but I don't buy many phone games anyway but I have about as many Windows Phone games as I did on my iPhone. Windows Phone could benefit from having Hero's Academy.

Thank you. This is precisely what I wanted. No harm done, it's just a personal pet peeve when someone disagrees and doesn't elaborate why.

Avatar image for bobafettjm
bobafettjm

2639

Forum Posts

874055

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 69

Edited By bobafettjm

I also use a Windows Phone. I have been somewhat frustrated by the lack of some apps, but it seems when it does finally get them I don't use them as much as I had thought anyway. I am pretty satisfied with my phone, but I am looking forward to Windows 8 phones for sure.

Avatar image for endaround
endaround

2275

Forum Posts

8320

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 5

Edited By endaround

Wordament is game enough for anyone