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Shareware Junction lets you choose from a variety of these products - all in one convenient location. Use of this site subject to Terms and Privacy Policy. I am using the software for research, good work! Boosting productivity of my team by allowing them to input ideas and get the response from other Good software. I absolutely love this. Keep updated! I like the valuable software you provide in your site.
I will bookmark your site and check again When I initially commented I clicked the "Notify me when new comments are added" checkbox and now You're so awesome! I don't believe I've truly read something like this before. So good to With its empty, black backgrounds and rows of marching blocks, the game looks like a no-frills version of Atari's Klax. But then, it isn't IQ's graphics that boosted the game into the top-o'-the-chart stratosphere in japan, where it has sold more than , copies.
This game is as addicting as it is simple. IQ's goal--to clear waves of blocks--is nothing revolutionary, but it's the simplistic gameplay that hooks you.
You start each round as a little guy standing in the path of rows of marching cubes, which come in three types: Normal Cubes, black Forbidden Cubes and green Advantage Cubes. The blocks march in unison toward you and the edge of the level, where they'll slip into the abyss if you don't clear them in time.
Your job is to get rid of the Normal and Advantage cubes, while leaving the Forbidden Cubes untouched oh, and take care not to get crushed by the blocks as they march toward you! To eliminate a cube, mark a floor panel in its path by tapping the Circle Button, then jab the button again when the cube rolls onto the panel.
Normal Cubes will disappear, but if you clear one of the special Advantage Cubes, you can tap the Triangle Button to clear as many as nine nearby blocks.
The trick is to clear all the blocks--except the black Forbidden ones, which must be allowed to fall off the edge--in as few turns as possible each forward roll of the cubes counts as a turn. Clear a Forbidden Cube and a portion of the level will crumble away, leaving you less room to maneuver. And that's pretty much how the game progresses, level after level.
No fancy power-ups. No gee-whiz special effects. Still, IQ does pack a potent incentive to keep you going. When you screw up, it displays your IQ rating, and if you play like an idiot, you'll earn the appropriate score.
And getting a high IQ takes more than just making it to higher levels; you'll have to clear each wave of cubes quickly, making every turn count. IQ's simple graphics and gameplay carry over into other parts of the package, too. Besides some brief tutorials and five different texture sets, IQ offers few options. And the Two-player Mode has players taking turns rather than competing head-to-head, so don't expect any heat-of-the-moment shouting matches like those spawned by multiplayer Tetris Attack.
Frankly, I thought this game looked boring and stupid the first time I saw it. After I played it for 10 minutes, I thought I was right. Then one hour passed, then another.
Pretty soon, I was hooked and majorly surprised, needless to say. I couldn't believe this simple-looking game could be so challenging and addicting, intelligent Qube isn't artificially difficult.
That means you'll never get frustrated at the game for your boo-boos, only at yourself. The gameplay is also excellently balanced, rewarding you for good performance by adding room on your short plank or punishing you for screwing up by taking valuable playing space away.
The integrated save system will not save your progress. You can save your progress in whatever point you like within the game, not only on the official checkpoints offered by the game. Home Emulators Platforms Games. In the game, the player controls a character who must run around a platform made of cubes, clearing certain cubes as they approach.
Cubes are "cleared" by marking a spot on the stage, waiting for the cube to roll on top of it, and then deactivating the marked spot. The game was well received by critics. A few sequels have been developed and the game has since been re-released on PlayStation Network in Japan and Europe.
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