As of today, the number one free gaming app on iTunes is Move the Box. I wanted to check out what the fuss was about, so I downloaded the app and got to playing. For about ten minutes, I enjoyed myself. And then, I got very, very angry.
In Move the Box, the goal is to move boxes so that three of the same line up and, thus, cancel each other out. Itās interesting, and thereās an array of different boxes. When theyāre all stacked together, it feels like a puzzle. Thatās exactly what it is, a puzzle. You are expected to āclearā all the boxes in a certain number of moves.
Sounds fun, no? Well, yes, until you, for example, clear all the boxes, but donāt do it in the exact number required to advance to the next stage. Then you are wondering, what the hell is going on.
Until you notice that, yes, you can pay for tips that tell you how to clear the boxes and advance to the next stage of puzzles. If you cannot figure that next stage out, well, buy more hintsāfour hints for US$0.99 and 12 hints for $1.99! (To be fair, you can rate the game for five free hints, which essentially is putting a pricetag on rating something, but whatever.)
I hate this sort of freemium contentāhate it, hate it, hate it. You can say, well Brian Ashcraft, itās your own damn fault you cannot clear the stage in the exact number of correct moves. Then, I would say to you, that is true random internet person, but who asked you?
This all reminds me of when I was a kid, and Iād call video game hotlines and get āgaming tipsā and āsecret codesā. And my parents would get huge phone bills. Iād also call Sgt. Slaughter on the phone, so whatever. It was the 80s.
What pains me is that the game seems like it could be fun, but that fun is marred by hints for sale, ratings for hints, and frustrating childhood memories.
Move the Box [iTunes]