![]() It’s incredibly challenging, and the visuals are vivid and smooth, while the music is a great listen. I’ve been thoroughly enjoying Tilt to Live 2: Redonkulous since I downloaded it last night. There are a total of seven leaderboards in Game Center and 48 achievements, so replay value here is very high. If you’re the type of person to challenge people, you can just tap on a name on the leaderboard to send that person a challenge without ever leaving the game. You can also level up and unlock more orbs to add to your arsenal when you complete the three goals for each rank.Īfter each game, you can see your final score, and how well you are doing compared with your Game Center friends. The bosses don’t appear in the same order, so you never know what you’re going to encounter when you see “Incoming Boss!” flashing on the screen.Īdditionally, there is a new scoring system, where you can earn bonus points by doing tricks with your weapons and arrows. Of course, they will also have their own special attacks that you need to avoid, otherwise it’s game over. These guys will have bullseye targets on them that you need to hit in order to defeat them. There are mini-bosses that can appear randomly as you play, and you can even encounter big, bad bosses that will take up the entire screen and you need to take them down with caution. Not only are there new weapons, but there are other goodies to up the ante. There are a ton of new weapon orbs to find and discover in TTL2 that weren’t found in the original, so there’s a lot of incentive to keep playing. These orbs will provide fiery explosions, launch ice in all directions, disguise yourself to be one of them for a while, fire off a big, dangerous brimstone, or even give you dual-ended laser swords. I personally like using the Regular controls, as they work fine for me, but the choices are nice to have.Įach game will consist of you avoiding all of the red dots while collecting the orbs to use against them. For the custom controls, you basically find a comfortable neutral position for yourself and then give it a try. Regardless of the mode, you have three control options before you start: Regular, Top-Down, or Custom. If you’re more in the casual mode, then I would go Classic, but if you love a good challenge, I highly recommend Code Red. Code Red is basically a hard mode, where you start out with a pretty moderate assault of red dots, and it rapidly picks up from there. Classic will be just that, where it starts out fairly slow but gradually picks up at a reasonable pace. Currently, you can play Classic or Code Red. TTL2 features two game modes, with a third option coming in the future. There is also a quirky, upbeat soundtrack to go along with the hectic gameplay. On my 5s, I had no issues with lag whatsoever, and everything was responsive. The animations in the game are fast, smooth, and fluid, but that’s to be expected, as the original had the same. ![]() You’re still in control of the little arrow-shaped object who is fleeing from the onslaught of dangerous red dots, so that hasn’t changed. If you’ve played the original Tilt to Live, then you will notice that the visuals in the sequel aren’t that far off from the original, though Redonkulous has a bit more depth to the battlegrounds with bezels and shadows and little details like that.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |