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WordJong App 0

Posted on April 15, 2009 by admin

WordJongYou put words and Mahjong together you get something called WordJong. Well, that doesn’t quite explain itself. You take the good old Mahjong Scrabble setup and throw in into Scrabble waters and you get WordJong. For people with a casual itch and an iPhone, this is probably want you want on your mobile phone.

First off, WordJong is pretty straightforward – which incidentally, doesn’t win it too many points. It presumes a little too much. It presumes that you exactly what you’re getting into and that you know what Mahjong Solitaire. It throws you into the deep end, assuming you know how to float and a lot of people really, really don’t know how to float in WordJong.

A tutorial would have made this entire game a lot less frustrating. Sure, an ingame instruction manual is there, but it is not really that helpful. However, once you get past this significant hump it’s actually a fun game. Spell a word with the available tiles, except the tiles aren’t on Scrabble rack, but on a Mahjong Solitaire setup. It takes its point cue from Scrabble, with more different letters, putting more into the bank when you use them successfully. Luckily, the dictionary in the game is pretty robust, catching onto some pretty obscure words. Like any word game, sometimes adding suffixes and prefixes leads to some rejected words, but that hardly ever happens.

Replay value for WordJong is immense. There’s an achievement system, so for people who are really into the Xbox360’s achievement system, they can find it in WordJong. A 100 point word can give you a medal.

Another potential gripe for WordJong is that it offers next to no hint system. Check that – there is no hint system out there. If you’ve got one last stack of letters to play with and no idea what to do with them, you’ll be stuck there. The game ends if there are no more words to make out but if there’s a word out there to be formed, no matter how obscure the word is, the game trucks on.

Wordjong is a creative version and variation of word games around the world. It’s amazingly addictive and with the number of modes available to keep it interesting and a worthy addition to any iPhone. Again, if there’s any stumbling block for WordJong, it’s its disdain for newbies. It just isn’t a friendly game for amateurs, especially if they don’t have any friends to teach them. Otherwise, it’s a fun game that’ll eat a lot of time and exercise your vocabulary as well.

Moonlight Mahjong 0

Posted on April 07, 2009 by admin

Moonlight MahjongMahjong’s a classic game and one that has been brought to the iPhone with Moonlight Mahjong. Much like Solitaire, Mahjong has been a staple game packaged with most operating systems and has created fans around the world. Most people in fact, first found themselves face to face with this ancient game through Windows.

Mahjong in itself is a great game to play and Moonlight Mahjong brings that to the iPhone with intuitive controls and 3D. The objective remains consistent – take out all the tiles on the board by selecting identical pairs. The thing is, the legal tiles are tiles that you can slide out without disturbing or messing up any of the other tiles, much like Uno Stacko. Simple premise and yet, so very addictive. It’s what made it addictive years ago and it continues to be addictive now.

Improvements to the game make it more accessible to novices and people who’ve never even heard of the game before. Unlike Solitaire which can get frustrating because you’re not quite sure if you missed that one move that could have made it solvable, you can be sure that in Moonlight Mahjong that every puzzle can be solved. That of course does not mean that you can’t fail – oh yeah, you can fail. It’s just nice to know that the solution is somewhere out there. There are around a dozen tile layouts for you, Mahjong playgrounds that you can thoroughly test your eyes and fingers with.

Moonlight Mahjong takes full advantage of the iPhone’s capabilities, using both the touch screen and the accelerometer. These combined offer tremendous control over the puzzle. With your fingers, you can select the tiles and rotate the scene for a different view that could give you the solution. That, funnily enough, provides one of the few flaws present in Moonlight Mahjong.

As you are supposed to use your fingers instead of the stylus, it can predictably become difficult to select certain tiles. Some time will be used up just trying to pick the right tiles by spinning and turning the view until you can. Despite this issue, it remains an addictive and fun way to eat up a few hours. It’s a simple game that can fill up a nice afternoon or a quick break in work.

Moonlight Mahjong is definitely a good download for both old fans and people who’re looking for a new game because they’re tired of all the match three games running around. It’s a nice change of pace and one most people definitely won’t regret.



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