One notable level which I had a blast playing was called 'Stoned', wherein I had to avoid falling rocks by spinning the world so they would drop by the wayside. The real fun comes in the middle set of chapters, in which you are tasked with not only moving yourself, but the objects around you. After solving them, you are generally rewarded with another checkpoint, allowing you to bask in your victory and go do other things. Each level is cunningly divided up into puzzles, with each puzzle taking a short amount of time to complete. These points are laid out fairly frequently and designed in such a perfect way for mobile titles. When you die, whether you end up smashed under a falling rock or, the more likely one, landed on a flat surface at too great a speed, you are resurrected quickly at the last checkpoint. Yet It Moves never punishes you for failing. The control scheme feels so natural, so right and interactive on an iPhone screen that I can't imagine playing Yet It Moves on the PC or other platform. Spinning the game-world takes a little getting used to, though as with anything, practice makes perfect. Instead of just running and jumping across a wild and varied paper-esque landscape, players can drag their finger across the screen to rotate the world, creating floors out of ceilings and opening up new paths towards the end of the level. ![]() The game takes the traditional 2D platformer and - quite literally - turns it on its head. Life Is Strange: Episode 1 - Chrysalis Review - Donnie Darko Daydreams Whether I play for 30 seconds or 30 minutes, it remains an enjoyable experience that does not try my patience and whose difficulty scales up appropriately across the many levels. Fun, easy, with a playtime I can adjust to whatever my current situation. Fun, but with the right amount of challenge. ![]() Yet It Moves is the precisely the kind of mobile title I always look for. In the 17th century, after the Inquisition forced him to recant his stance that the earth moved around the Sun and not vice versa, Galileo is said to have muttered ' And yet it moves.' Meaning that it did not matter what you say or think, the fact remains.Įvolve: Hunters Quest Review - Much Better Than You'd ThinkĭeNA's game Yet It Moves - the mobile version having removed the ' And' from the original 2009 PC title - while nothing close to a treatise on solar movement, is a game I think the Viennese master would appreciate.
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