Game designer.
I’m a Director of Game Design now.
Game designer.
I’m a Director of Game Design now.
This is a moment. Take it bird by bird.
Imbroglio (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/imbroglio/id969264934) is one of my favorite minimal purchase iOS games. I haven’t played it in awhile, but it’s a unique dungeon puzzle game where you place attacks as floor tiles on the board ahead of playing. There’s some consistent rules with ramping challenge, which made it super replayable for me. I loved trying different floor designs, finding strategies, and there’s a small progression system that’s fun. Hasn’t been updated in a few years, but it was a great design despite the rough appearance.
I can see that take. I know a lot of good people trying, and a lot of them aren’t the most educated. I’m about as book smart as someone can be for many things. I have a philosophy degree. That’s pretty nerdy.
But the OP post sounded like “poorly educated” = bad or unworthy. I’ve helped a lot of people who didn’t know any better but wanted to grow and learn. “What screams ‘ignorance’?” might have been a more apt title.
I’ll take “poorly educated” over “educated and unwilling to learn or grow.”
There’s some diagnostic info when in game through the battery sidebar menu, I think. You can use that to see frame rate and other performance benchmarks.
I usually just google or YouTube some way to improve whatever game I’m playing on deck. Usually, someone has already done the leg work to figure it out.