![]() Presentation-wise it’s decidedly simple, but endearing at the same time.īut don’t think this is a game without complexity. It’s nice that it’s there, and it adds to the world that the game tries to build. There’s a sort of story going on here, but it’s really just window dressing and a series of jokes. Buy some new characters, figure out what they do, and then wander off to do something else again while the cycle repeats in your absence. Leave it alone for a few hours and when you’ll come back you’ll find you’ve gained a ridiculous amount of money. It’s a deliciously simple compulsion loop.Īnd the game continues when you’re not looking at it. The more damage they do, the more monsters you can kill. The tougher your characters get, the more damage they do. Every monster you kill chucks a bunch of coins at you. You can spend these coins on new characters or toughening up the ones you’ve already got. Most of them do damage automatically, although your starting character needs you to tap to smash monsters in the face. The game sees you controlling a ten-strong army of little warriors. ![]() ![]() And if any of that sounds interesting to you you should probably pick it up and give it a go. There’s meat on its clicky bones, but it still remains a staunchly casual experience all the same - and it’s the sort of casual experience that casual detractors aren’t going to be able to find much wrong with. This is an entertaining idler that keeps you interested with new spells, new characters and new formations. We’ve seen plenty of games that have played around with the fundamentals of it, changing things up to entice players who might have been put off by the simplicity of the first generation - and Crusaders of the Lost Idols does exactly that. ![]() The clicker genre has made huge strides on mobile this year. Still unlikely to be enough here for some players.Īre style is a little on the simple side. ![]()
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