Nick Gillett 

Ten top iPhone games

The pretend pint is far from the last word in iPhone fun, says Nick Gillett
  
  


Before the iPhone, mobile games tended to be ambitious retreads of console titles that had no prayer of working on a mobile's keypad; creaky 1980s arcade games or ludicrously amateurish software. Those days are partly over, although you still have to be careful trawling the vastness of Apple's App Store.

1. Ragdoll Blaster (£1.19)

Sublime portable entertainment in which you have to hit a target by firing a floppy figure from a cannon. Within this beguilingly simple framework appear myriad physics-based mechanisms and diversions that interpose themselves between cannon and target demanding increasing dexterity and ingenuity.

2. Drawrace (59P)

Using a finger to sketch in the racing line for your car, drawing fast on straights or slowly to round corners without slipping. With location-based online leader boards that continually goad you into one more go, this is a simple classic in the making.

3. Minigore (59P)

Without any tactile feedback, joypads drawn on the iPhone's touchscreen are usually a disastrous attempt to recreate conventional control schemes. MiniGore just about gets away with it, using one side to move, while the other directs a stream of fire at the invading horde.

4. Zen Bound (£2.99)

Part game, part relaxation tool, Zen Bound gives you a series of small wooden models to wrap in string by gently turning them with your finger. No time limit and mellow music mean an atmosphere of calm prevails, providing a pleasing break.

5. Beatmaker (£11.99)

A sequencer and drum machine that can be used to assemble quick tunes if you find yourself out of range of a recording studio. Surprisingly flexible and easy to use.

6. Worms (£2.99)

The console classic arrives untouched, with your warrior worms using a range of comedy cartoon weaponry to eviscerate each other. Frustratingly let down by imprecision in its interface.

7. Triazzle (£1.79)

This version of Triazzle retains its jigsaw-style board game forebear's pattern-matching antics, adding hundreds of puzzles and a bit of gentle animation when you get a match. Solving each level requires an engrossing mixture of observation and trial and error.

8. Harbour Master (59P)

Like Flight Control before it, this has you drawing routes through a series of busy harbours to guide boats safely to a dock, then off into the open sea. Reminiscent of early Game & Watch titles in the way pressure steadily piles on, it's a masterful use of the touch screen.

9. Sentinel 2 (£1.79)

Tower defence games go to Mars as streams of extra-terrestrials head for your base, requiring increasingly powerful weaponry to take them out. This sequel brings new turrets and a slightly less brutal difficulty level than its forebear.

10. Go Go Rescue Squad (59P)

A simple action puzzle involving cartoon firemen putting out blazes and rescuing civilians by tossing them to safety. Clearly made on a shoestring, its rough and ready graphics just about do the job, but movement and targeting throws can be a chore.

 

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