A Collection Of Systems, Cartoons Found In How My Body Works
This app provides different media for learning more about the human body. The app presents 3D models, illustrations, a game, and even an 80s cartoon (you read that right).
This app provides different media for learning more about the human body. The app presents 3D models, illustrations, a game, and even an 80s cartoon (you read that right).
This app provides provides peace of mind during uncertain times.
We’ve just about all seen the trick where a bunny gets pulled out of a hat, but did you ever stop to think how it got there in the first place? This game aims to answer that very question.
This game adds some monkey business to your standard Breakout game.
This game combines the awesome graphics of the Unreal Engine with the legendary tale of Sir Lancelot. But this isn’t your medieval literature’s version of Lancelot. This is a kick butt, take charge story, just like Apocalypse Knights.
Unfortunately, it’s a cold and hard fact of life that the ignorance is a deeply entrenched aspect of the human condition. That doesn’t mean that you have to let your child doubt whether or not he or she wants to go to school each day
This is a fun game for not only matching fans, but also puzzle fans as well. The tiles’ graphics look bright and crisp, with a nice wooden motif.
Overall the game's pace is rather lethargic. That, in combination with the little variation between levels, leads to a dull experience.
Anyo and Rui make a great pair because Anyo likes to swing from cliff to cliff and Rui likes to be the medium for that swinging.
So what do you do when you’re faced with lugging the little one around in the child seat of the shopping cart? The answer may be as close as your pocket or purse.
Little known fact: Alfred Nobel was the inventor of dynamite. He, however, did not invent this game. The fine folks at MIrage-lab did that. And while they didn’t invent dynamite, they’ve certainly found a good way to put it to use.
This is a really fun game that is basic yet engaging at the same time. I had to put my iPhone down just so that I could write this review.
In perhaps the worst pricing plan I have ever seen in an app, three different modes are available at different prices.
This game unites game developer Chillingo with children’s channel Nickelodeon to bring a squishy physics-based game.
The game seems to throw achievements at you left and right. “First quiz completed,” “perfect in first quiz,” “10 quizzes completed,” and “level 1 completed“ all become earned within minutes of playing the game.
You create a box to hold journals, and a journal to hold your pages, and your pages to record what you’d like.
Making webs is as simple as swiping from one spot to the next. But don’t get too carried away because a web counter will get used up for all that silk you spin
Oh, what a complicated web we weave, when at first we try to figure out how to solve the level.
Overall, this is a fun game that will put your puzzle solving and fine motor control skills to the test.
There’s something magical about seeing kids experiment with music. Whether they’re singing nonsense, banging on something as a drum, or clapping to a song, the cute factor is always off the charts.
Just about any little girl will tell you that fairies are real. Now you can reply to them, “I know,” and show them this app.
Gameplay is casual, yet challenging as the game progresses. This is unlike another shoot em up, Bug Princess 2, which goes ballistic.
This game combines a generative music maker with a tower defense game. Don’t believe me? Then read on.