Turtle, Turtle, Turtle: RTSes for Basebodies
How to prevail against waves of attacking tower defense games
5/15/2009 6:39 PM | 6 Comments | Page 2 of 4
4. Can I have a twist, please? Something -- anything! -- to stand out from the other 13,271 tower defense games.
I can't really elaborate on this one, because it's your job to think of the twist. You're the guy making the game. I'm just the customer making demands of you. So in the following list of tower defense games I've played, I'll let you know the twist the developers thought up. Following are my verdicts for the tower defense games I've been trying.
Lock's Quest
Lock's Quest
The Twist: It's on the Nintendo DS!
The Verdict: A classic example of bad pacing. It's the JRPG of tower defense games, front-loaded with anime characters, expositions and the sort of slow wind-up that makes me think the developers made this game for children who are slow. Speaking of slow, it's the only game where I managed to accidentally delete my saved game instead of load it. It takes quite an interface to let a buffoon like me destroy his progress with a single mis-tap from a Nintendo DS stylus.
Savage Moon
Savage Moon
The Twist: Lots and lots of bugs. Not the bad kind. The kinds of bugs from "Starship Troopers," which the developers freely admit was an influence. Not that their admission is necessary, since it's obvious just from playing. There are also sliders that let you tweak global settings during the missions, giving the whole thing a more interactive feel.
The Verdict: Not a lot of frills, but solid enough that it's the tower defense game I'd play if I only had a PlayStation 3. Did I mention that it's only on the PlayStation 3?
Desktop Tower Defense
Desktop Tower Defense
The Twist: I've never played it, but I've certainly heard about it enough. This is one of the more famous tower defense games and the one people liked before the genre was popular.
The Verdict: TBD. THQ just published it on the Nintendo DS, so here I come!
Comet Crash
Comet Crash
The Twist: Head-to-head multiplayer. Each player not only builds defense, but also spends resources to accumulate an offensive force. The trick is what units to build, when to release them and how many to release. In fact,
Comet Crash is almost a straight-up real-time strategy game.
The Verdict: Perfect for those with friends willing to play tower defense games, which have historically been a solitary pursuit. Unfortunately, you can't play online and there's no support for artificial-intelligence opponents. The single-player game is mostly a series of traditional tower defense puzzles, but they do a good job of incorporating the offensive part of the strategy.