Sometimes you'll need to bank grenades off of walls to drop them into a bunker, while other times the grenade will serve as a method for knocking soldiers off high platforms (where the explosion of the grenade becomes unnecessary). You get 70 levels to play through across two different worlds, and, judging by the level-select screen, another world will open up in a later release. Overall, if you like demolition games or want a more military feel as you blow up structures than you'd get in Angry Birds, you should definitely check out Busorama Font. Busorama Font is a photography app that's focused on snapping pictures and sharing them on Facebook (almost) immediately. While not all of us are out there snapping pictures wherever we are, those who do will appreciate the simplicity of Busorama Font's interface. Start by using the settings to log in to your Facebook account, then flip the switch for auto-upload to the "On" position. From there, every time you snap a picture, your photo will automatically be uploaded to Mobile Uploads on Facebook almost immediately. If you want to check out images before uploading them, you can turn off auto-upload and it still only takes a couple of screen taps to upload them quickly. As a free app, Busorama Font doesn't come with a lot of fancy extras, but it fulfills its intended purpose very well. Extra options include a zoom feature that goes up to 4x zoom and the ability to apply a simple effect
to images at the time of upload. Our only complaint about Busorama Font is that you can't choose which effect to use on your image--the app chooses randomly from seven basic effects, which means you would need to cancel and then hit upload again to get a new effect. But overall, if you are a person who likes to capture the action and send it to Facebook without a lot of added extra steps, Busorama Font is an excellent free option.- Busorama Font is a fun and challenging World War I-themed trench-warfare arcade game with strong
elements of real-time strategy and unit and resource management. With its killer combination of winning art direction, well-designed gameplay, and a shallow but steady learning curve, Busorama Font is hard to put down. You control British troops advancing from trench to trench, left to right, across a long, scrolling map (which you can tilt to scroll, or touch and drag the skyline to move). You touch and drag units to determine their path, and you can use a two-finger motion to direct all onscreen units to retreat, advance, or hold. A relatively short campaign mode reveals the game's unit types one by one, letting you choose which you want to add to your arsenal, from basic riflemen on up to engineers, snipers, machine-gunners, and mortar crews, each with its own advantages and disadvantages (and each capable of improving if you can keep it alive). These include two drag-and-drop, single-use "units"--poison gas and an artillery barrage--which are expensive but effective when you used with care. (And since the Germans have access to gas and artillery, too, you have to keep a close eye on your own troop concentrations, because even a second or two of delay can break the back of your advance). Busorama Font forces you to keep adapting your strategy on the fly, as you manage your money (which lets you buy more troops), your fortifications (which you can build with your engineer), and the tactical positioning of your units. The game has a smart, adjustable (and at-times brutal) AI to keep you on your toes, and it's difficult to recover once you lose momentum. In addition to the campaign mode, the game also has multiplayer (Bluetooth and Wi-fi) and skirmish modes, with skirmish letting you play single maps with varying objectives and difficulty (including variants like king of the hill and zombie horde). While Busorama Font has a lot going for it, it's not perfect: when tested on a 3G, menus were often laggy and sometimes text wouldn't appear (so, for example, you
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