Paqwak - Computer Games

Computer Games - games online, puzzle games … etc

Archive for April, 2008

22 April, 2008 | No comments

How to Speed Level in World of Warcraft

How to Speed Level in World of Warcraft

WoW speed leveling is the goal behind every hardcore world of warcraft gamer. I know as I am a hardcore gamer myself having played the game since its inception. Every time I create a new character my goal is to break my own wow speed leveling record. A task that is easier said then done especially if you play on PvP servers like myself as each power run is different.

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22 April, 2008 | No comments

Casual Gamer Chick: Mia Reading: The Bugaboo Bugs Review

Mia BoxMia Reading, by Kutoka Interactive, is an Edutainment (educational) game for children of all ages which builds on the Mia series of games. Mia is a mouse looking for adventures and in Mia Reading The Bugaboo Bugs Mia must help rid the house of pesky bugs before the humans find them. If Mia and her friends fail to remove the creatures, which highly resemble cockroaches, the family will call the exterminators and Mia’s family will be out on the streets.

Mia Reading is available on both Macintosh and Windows on a hybrid CD and has something for the whole family in terms of reading education from simple “level 1″ style activities such as picking the correct letter to spell “Dog” to Tic-Tac-Toe using words that ’sound like Snail.”. Your children can enjoy a fully fleshed out storyline in Adventure Mode or click right to the reading activities in Activities Mode.

Mia - ActivitiesA review of a children’s educational game isn’t complete without the right type of reviewer: my five year old daughter Brianna. If you want to introduce your child to video games, the educational gaming genre is a great introduction because they do not realize (yet) their learning. Although some of the activities are a bit over her head in terms of learning level, she still tries them repeatedly because children do not believe in limits and barriers–you can do anything you want to do.

Mia Reading doesn’t limit your child to reading a book; you child will learn to follow instructions, construct words, build sentences, spell correctly, rhyme words, plurals and singulars, sounding out words and verbal instructions. The core activities mimic what a child will learn at school but applied in a fun interactive manner with memorable characters.

There are twelve activities:

Each activity has a series of difficulty levels ranging from level 1 to level 4 with the fourth level being the most challenging yet still fairly straight forward for an adult; you can assist your children where needed and make it a family activity. Certain games will be easier for younger children to play by alone, while others they may require assistance. Brianna usually figured them out by blind luck it seemed, because most activities do not let you “fail” but will let you try many times until you get it right.

Mia World MapThe activities are colorful, cheery and allow your child to visualize the goals and requirements. They are rewarded by voice overs from the animated characters and are encouraged to try again–your child will never feel like a failure and this is important because, as stated earlier, your child knows no barriers to learning. Unfortunately, later, we learn the technique of “I can’t do that” so it’s great to embrace the educational games early and often before they’re socialized into the belief of physical limitations.

Mia Reading is not simply a collection of mini-game activities but a fully fleshed out adventure with a great storyline for young children. You’ll play as Mia and you’ll explore the huge world of the humans from the grates of the heating system, closets, under tables and through the wide world of the kitchen. Younger children will be hinted through some of the quests by having Mia remind them of the task as they switch areas or limit where they can explore until completing a specific quest, much like a real RPG or adventure title.

The adventure interface is straight forward and easy to adapt to with visual que’s and explanation. You adventure by moving your mouse around the screen and having Mia follow it around. Mousing over objects will alter your cursor to a “pointing finger,” which indicates the object is clickable or can have action taken upon it. If your child can figure out how to move the mouse around the screen and click, they’ll have all the required assets to play Mia Reading Bugaboo Bugs!

Mia BugabooThe adventure does not simply string the activities together but builds on exploration and encourages creative thinking to complete the tasks. The initial quest has Mia looking for a battery and some copper wire for one of the characters in the game. Mia explores the area to find the battery but must complete one of the activities to be awarded the second material object in order to complete the quest.

The adventure mode allows you to carry out more than one quest at a time so you can move on from one quest if you encounter another along the way much like a standard RPG or online game like World of Warcraft but much more basic. It’s hard to grow bored when you’ve got so many tasks ahead of you. Children may feel like they’ve got an endless amount of enjoyment and tasks to complete; this isn’t a 10 minute adventure mode but a full featured game. Each quest brings a level of satisfaction, entertainment and educational value.

Thus far my daughter jumps on her mac book at least twice a day to play Mia Reading. She’s a huge fan of playhousedisney.com and it was extremely hard to pull her off the online flash games on their site. She’s also played Mia Reading more than Wii games and her DS games which are not educational! She doesn’t seem to realize Mia Reading is a learning game at all–it’s just fun.

The age range for Mia Reading is five to nine years of age and runs on:

Minimal System Requirements
Windows XP (sp2) / 2000 (sp4), VISTA; Processor: Pentium III - 1Ghz; RAM: 512 Mb
Video & Sound: DirectX 9 compatible; DVD-ROM Drive: 4X: Hard Disk Space: 1.2 Gb

Macintosh OS X, 10.4, 10.5; Processor: G4 - 1Ghz; RAM: 512 Mb
Video & Sound: Standard Macintosh; DVD-ROM Drive: 4X: Hard Disk Space: 1.2 Gb

You can find this game for $29.99 at Toys ‘R Us in the United States and $29.95 CAD in Canada at Kutoka’s online store.

22 April, 2008 | No comments

Jay Is Games: dRive

dRive is quite possibly the first calculus-themed game to get a review on this site, but don't go fleeing for the high country quite yet; you don't need to understand the math to play the game. At its core, dRive is a simple "catch the falling objects" game, but the unusual, calculus-based method of controlling three games at once turns dRive into an innovative, fascinating game.

21 April, 2008 | No comments

Casual Gamer Chick: Mystery at Mansfield Manor: Solve a Murder

Mystery at Mansfield ManorIf you have ever wanted to solve a murder mystery, now is your chance. SR Entertainment Inc has launched a different type of interactive murder game. The game is based on the web and  is a live action  interactive murder mystery called Mystery at Mansfield Manor.

Players pay $7.99 Cdn, about $7 USD, and receive unlimited access to the web site for four days, including a behind the scenes area and a photo gallery. The game is about two and half hours long, if you play it straight through. Players have to interview suspects and determine who is telling the truth and who is leading them on a wild goose chase. There are multiple endings based on the choices you make during the game play.

“On the eve of his forced early retirement Detective Frank Mitchell is sent to Mansfield Manor to solve the murder of wealthy oil industrialist Colin Mansfield Sr. After arriving at the manor, the viewer begins to take control over his actions,” says Rory Scherer, producer and screenwriter for Mystery At Mansfield Manor. “Essentially, the viewer takes on the role of the lead character, Detective Mitchell, and must solve the murder before the story’s midnight deadline.”

Sounds like an interesting concept for a game.  Murder mysteries are interesting and keep players involved in the action, not to mention the live action will make it seem like you are participating in a movie. The payment method is interesting and it seems like there is plenty of time to complete the game since players are given four days to complete a two and half hour game. If it sounds like your type of game, head over to www.MysteryAtMansfieldManor.com and check it out.

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21 April, 2008 | No comments

The Huge Online Multi-Player Games Market

Over recent years there has been an ever increasing demand worldwide for online multi player games. This growth has been fueled by the booming skill games sector which has evolved from being a niche market just a few years ago, to very much a mainstream player today.

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21 April, 2008 | No comments

GBGames: Linux Game Development: GLIBC_2.4 Errors Solved

Last week, I wrote about the `GLIBC_2.4′ not found errors your game might get when an application built on a new distribution is run on an older distribution, such as Debian Stable and Slackware 11. Judging from my search logs, this problem seems to be common enough to warrant a follow-up post. I have since [...]

21 April, 2008 | No comments

Free Game News: Moss

MossMoss is a plateform game designed by Ian Adam. The objective is to move the player across his world using the arrow keys as fast as possible. You are timed during your journey. The fastest completion times get ranked on the high score table. Moss is a fun little game, perfect for a coffee break! Have fun!



FreeGamesNews

21 April, 2008 | No comments

Casual Gamer Chick: Penguins Mania

Have you ever wanted to know what it was like to raise Penguins? Now you can find out with Penguins Mania for the PC. The penguin tribe was spooked and quickly moved from their nice cozy home, but have left behind two eggs that hatch into the first two penguins that need you help. Players have to help keep the penguins safe and nurture them into adulthood to repopulate the penguin populations.Penguins Mania

It may not seem very challenging for to help raise Penguins, but it is. The penguins are delicate creatures that need to be fed on time, which means players need to find fish to feed them. Penguins also have many threats in the wild and players need to protect the penguins from these threats. Players are rewarded with gold coins, dubbed happy coins, when the penguins are happy and taken care of. Players use the coins to hatch more baby penguins and need a certain number of coins to complete the levels.

Penguins Mania sounds like an interesting concept for a casual game. Not many games have players nurturing penguins, but it will be interesting to see if there are gamers out there that like this sort of game. This game would seem to appeal to animal lovers and people that have a nurturing quality and like to take care of things.

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21 April, 2008 | No comments

GameZebo: Travel Agency Review

Face it: If there's one genre of casual game competing with hidden object outings for the title of "most overdone" lately, it's the time management category. And at first blush, Travel Agency certainly seems to make the same mistakes as so many forgettable mouse-mashers which have come before. But look beyond the throwaway storyline, general lack of personality and slow opening, and you might be surprised. For a largely forgettable endeavor, it's still a well-executed take on the standard "click here, run there, rinse and repeat" formula that delivers decent thrills, once the excitement really gets up and running.

21 April, 2008 | No comments

GBGames: Thousander Club Update: April 21st

For this week’s Thousander Club update: Game Hours: 409.25(previous two years) + 68 (current year) = 477.25 / 1000 Game Ideas: 710 (previous two years) + 35 (current year) = 745 / 1000 This past week is the first time I managed to work over 20 hours. From 42 hours last week to 68 hours this week, [...] « Next entries Previous entries »