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Posts Tagged ‘tutorial’

Hexxagon Labs 1.2-Join the hexagons to score points

If you’re a fan of puzzle games and are bored of the same old formats then Hexxagon Labs may make for a refreshing change.

Kind-of an Othello with hexagons, Hexxagon Labs sees you tackle a series of mind-boggling quests over a series of complex levels. The aim of the game is to fill as many of the spaces on the board as possible by moving around strategically and capturing enemy pieces.

It’s pretty straightforward to get a grasp of the rules of Hexxagon Labs if you’ve played Othello before, but if you haven’t then there are a few tutorial levels to help you on your way. It’s all great fun, and the inclusion of scientific facts along the way helps add to the enjoyment factor.

Hexxagon Labs is well presented – the graphics are nice and colorful and the sounds are chirpy if not a little annoying. The only real problem with the game is that there just aren’t enough levels, and the control system is slightly fiddly.

On the whole though, Hexxagon Labs provides a fun way to kill some time.

{t}Download{/t} Hexxagon Labs 1.2 in Softonic

Hexxagon Labs 1.2 (UIQ 3)-Join the hexagons to score points

If you’re a fan of puzzle games and are bored of the same old formats then Hexxagon Labs may make for a refreshing change.

Kind-of an Othello with hexagons, Hexxagon Labs sees you tackle a series of mind-boggling quests over a series of complex levels. The aim of the game is to fill as many of the spaces on the board as possible by moving around strategically and capturing enemy pieces.

It’s pretty straightforward to get a grasp of the rules of Hexxagon Labs if you’ve played Othello before, but if you haven’t then there are a few tutorial levels to help you on your way. It’s all great fun, and the inclusion of scientific facts along the way helps add to the enjoyment factor.

Hexxagon Labs is well presented – the graphics are nice and colorful and the sounds are chirpy if not a little annoying. The only real problem with the game is that there just aren’t enough levels, and the control system is slightly fiddly.

On the whole though, Hexxagon Labs provides a fun way to kill some time.

{t}Download{/t} Hexxagon Labs 1.2 (UIQ 3) in Softonic

How to: Add a snow effect to text in Photoshop

I’ve always preferred to give handmade presents, a piece of handicraft made by myself that makes the gift more personal. Following this idea, and as the holiday season approaches, I like to prepare special Photoshop tutorials to create your own greeting cards. In case you missed them, here’s the 2007 tutorial and here’s the 2008 [...]

Digital Painting & Traditional animation

Project Dogwaffle 2 is a paint program for the PC which also includes animation features. Started in 1997 as a project to work around shortcomings of the established ‘big guns’ tools used in the professional community, it is loaded with fast or realtime filters for color enhancing in digital photos and animations, special effects and many built-in natural media brushes.

Dogwaffle also has powerful user-defined custom and animated brushes, fractal particle brushes, full tablet support, non-opaque layers, artist guides, powerful color gradients, great text tools, special FX for sky, snow, wet paint and even effects used commonly in 3D CG such as lens flares, as well as full Alpha support with direct painting on Alpha. Perfect for the hobbyist on a tight budget who likes to explore colors and shapes, and equally useful for web artists, game content creators, cartoonists, designers as well as in digital photography and traditional animation, Project Dogwaffle almost lets you paint the natural way – but without the mess.

NB: After installing PD 2.0 get the 2.1b update free download at ProjectDogwaffle.

How to: turn someone into a vampire in Photoshop

Now that it’s only two weeks to Halloween it’s time to start thinking about costumes. Have you decided yours yet? A ghost, a movie monster, a zombie, maybe a vampire? There are many possibilities to choose from! But if you’re too shy to dress up and hit the street, you can try a virtual costume [...]

How to: add a custom reflection to sunglasses

This summer a friend of mine went to New York and came back with a handful of beautiful pictures from the city. One of them caught my attention: a close-up of his girlfriend, standing on floor 86th of the Empire State Building, with the New York skyline reflected on her sunglasses. I immediately thought it [...]

Pro Windows Phone 7 Development [Paperback]

The Windows Phone 7 platform provides a remarkable opportunity for Windows developers to create state-of-the-art mobile applications using their existing skills and a familiar toolset. Pro Windows Phone 7 Development will help you unlock the potential of this platform and create dazzling, visually rich, and highly functional applications for your business and for the community. [...]

MiniPiano 1.3.3-Tinkle the ivories on your iPhone

Ever thought about using your iPhone as a musical instrument? Well, now you can thanks to MiniPiano.

The app includes just one octave of a keyboard, which you can play simply by touching the keys on the screen. The keys have been gorgeously recreated and the full-screen keyboard is very easy to play (in the sense that the keys are touch-friendly, not that it will make you sound like Beethoven).

The sound reproduction in MiniPiano is excellent. In fact, if you turned up the volume on your device and started playing on the bus, people would think someone’s smuggled a Fazioli on board.

Aside from having just one octave, one thing I felt was missing from MiniPiano was some kind of help for beginners. It could’ve been a nice learning aid had the developer included a setting to display notes on the keys, or added some kind of tutorial option.

If you’re looking for a way to compose tunes on the way to work, MiniPiano makes for a sound choice.

Download MiniPiano 1.3.3 in Softonic

Westward 1.02 (SP)-Wild West strategy adventure

If John Wayne were still alive today, Westward would undoubtedly be his mobile game of choice for long bus journeys (or wagon trips, come to think of it).

Westward sees you face the challenge of controlling the Wild West, by building booming towns, exploring unchartered plains, guiding settlers to success, and protecting citizens from outlaws. The game boasts four different locations, with more than 20 levels to explore.

Westward starts with a tutorial level, where a teacher guides you through the process of discovering new lands, fighting bandits, harvesting food and water, and building houses, farms and factories. The controls are well explained and it’s pretty easy to pick up the basics from these tutorials.

I like the way that Westward doesn’t try to tie you to playing as one character. All of the citizens, sheriffs and deputies can be controlled independently of each other, and the challenge of the game lies in utilizing each one to their full potential.

Like many strategy games, Westward always displays the current tasks that you need to work on, and once you’ve achieved a mission, a new one pops up straight away. This makes it a game that’s awfully hard to put down, because the temptation of playing “just one more mission” is tough to resist.

In terms of its presentation, Westward looks and sounds great with some lovely attention to detail. The background music is typical of those old western movie soundtracks and there are some realistic sound effects. Although the game’s graphics are incredibly detailed, I found them just a little bit too small for viewing on a mobile device. What’s more, the animation is a little slow and you seem to spend a lot of time waiting for characters to move from one place to another.

Overall though, Westward makes for a rip-roaring, gun-slinging, mobile adventure that’s very difficult to put down.

Download Westward 1.02 (SP) in Softonic

Westward 1.04-Wild West strategy adventure

If John Wayne were still alive today, Westward would undoubtedly be his mobile game of choice for long bus journeys (or wagon trips, come to think of it).

Westward sees you face the challenge of controlling the Wild West, by building booming towns, exploring unchartered plains, guiding settlers to success, and protecting citizens from outlaws. The game boasts four different locations, with more than 20 levels to explore.

Westward starts with a tutorial level, where a teacher guides you through the process of discovering new lands, fighting bandits, harvesting food and water, and building houses, farms and factories. The controls are well explained and it’s pretty easy to pick up the basics from these tutorials.

I like the way that Westward doesn’t try to tie you to playing as one character. All of the citizens, sheriffs and deputies can be controlled independently of each other, and the challenge of the game lies in utilizing each one to their full potential.

Like many strategy games, Westward always displays the current tasks that you need to work on, and once you’ve achieved a mission, a new one pops up straight away. This makes it a game that’s awfully hard to put down, because the temptation of playing “just one more mission” is tough to resist.

In terms of its presentation, Westward looks and sounds great with some lovely attention to detail. The background music is typical of those old western movie soundtracks and there are some realistic sound effects. Although the game’s graphics are incredibly detailed, I found them just a little bit too small for viewing on a mobile device. What’s more, the animation is a little slow and you seem to spend a lot of time waiting for characters to move from one place to another.

Overall though, Westward makes for a rip-roaring, gun-slinging, mobile adventure that’s very difficult to put down.

Download Westward 1.04 in Softonic

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