Touch Arcade - "If you have no tolerance for Electronic Dance Music (EDM), Double Fine’s Dropchord [$0.99] won’t be your thing. No chance. It may as well be called EDM: The Game, packed with visceral, beat-dropping music and intense, glowing visuals. It’s video-game-as-album, with tracks and verses instead of stages. I happen to love both EDM and video games. And I love Dropchord."
Double Fine Productions announced today that some of the developer’s mobile games on iPhone and iPad will not be updated when iOS 11 is released later this year.
John Bedford (Modojo): All of today's best App Store price-drops.
EG:Dropchord is a straightforward game built around an elegant idea. The range of applications of the idea is too limited for this to be considered more than a stylish curio - and, in opting for a purely abstract backdrop, it has none of the opaque sense of narrative progression felt in Rez of Child of Eden. But Dropchord demonstrates Double Fine's expanding range and competency as the studio begins to diversify. This may be a palette-cleansing effort for the studio's staff, but in Dropchord's case that sense of creative liberation works in our favour.