![]() ![]() > I don’t feel that most of the answers are random guessing, if you really do put your mind to this series you should have no problem completing it. (Unless there is one, though I can’t seem to find it.) ![]() There should be some sort of balance - if we had a word bank or something, perhaps the problem wouldn’t be so bad. Why build a ladder to send a dog across when you can just jetpack to the star yourself? Or in this game’s instance, why sit back and think of Cthulhu, when clicking randomly will produce the same result but (more than likely) quicker? Rather than sit back and think, it’s easier to just click and hope. But Doodle God/Devil, by giving you so many possible outcomes, makes itself vague on exactly what it’s demanding. Kind of like Scribblenauts or similar games you have all these tools at your disposal. The problem with the game then becomes not that the combinations are stupid, but that as a puzzle game the answer is usually quicker to find via random clicking rather than actual thinking. Not references to locations or figures from literature or whatever. “Devil” makes the think of “sin”, and related to that, stuff like crimes, disease, etc. I wouldn’t normally walk into a game like Doodle Devil and think, “I’m going to make Styx”, a river that was centered in Greek mythology if I’m remembering correctly. Also if you feel that this game alone will cause spamming in chat just send them a link to (). Sure there are a couple of questionable combinations, that may be easily resolved through a walkthrough, but for the most part it’s a genuinely good game. Besides, both games have the Kongregate API established, which is only available to developers that have the FLA.Īnd, yes, I guess some people do enjoy “spamming” answers, but I don’t feel that most of the answers are random guessing, if you really do put your mind to this series you should have no problem completing it. this leads me to think that possibly, both authors on Kongregate are in collaboration of one another through this company. On iTunes the publisher of both of the games is JoyBits Ltd. Yes, the two games, Doodle God and Doodle Devil are by two different authors, but both of them are the official creators of each independent game. ![]()
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