MGU "How to get free coins and crowns?
Use any hex editor apps that are available for android and change the value of HEX Dword to any amount you want.
Coins HEX a9 4c 53 d5 Dword
Crowns HEX 7f 7a 00 d1 Dword
If the codes doesn't work, it is possible that your android version is not compatible with the code I provided above."
Carl Williams writes, "Okay, I am a retro gamer from the old days. I have been playing since the days of Pong into the Atari 2600 era through to today. When the crash happened I just thought it was a resetting of the industry- it kind of was. During my younger years I was a huge fan of the action games, not only because that was really all we had either. When I got my first taste of turn based strategy role playing though, I was almost instantly hooked. Sure, I had the usual awkward stage of “what is this?” then after keeping on and pushing forward, I figured out the basics and started really enjoying the style. One of my earliest memories of this style of game was back on the Commodore 64 but I can’t remember the title of the game. The earliest popular title, in this genre, I remember enjoying was Shining Force on the Sega Genesis. Since then I have followed the genre through Vandal Hearts (Konami/PSOne), Shining Force II/CD (Sega/Genesis and Sega CD) and of course, Final Fantasy Tactics (I playing FFTA on the GBA a ton). Now I am more of an Android gamer and well, I learned early on there are not a lot of options in this genre on Google’s OS. I did find a few and they are listed here."
I've been looking for standard RPGs to play on Android, without all the modern pay to play and pay to win stuff you normally see in Android titles.
I don't think anything can beat Final Fantasy Tactics when it comes to this genre. Many come close but none can match, much less surpass, this gem.
We are long overdue for a true sequel.
Hardcore Games: A big reason I play mobile games is because they’re, well…mobile. I can play them on my daily subway commute. I can play them while I wait in line for the bus. I can even sneak in a few moments while I wait for my computer to start at my desk, before I finally commit to beginning my workday. Lionheart: Tactics, developed by Kongregate, did not let me do so. In fact, it let me do very little for more than a few minutes before I found myself having to either wait half an hour in order to proceed, or pay extra. I do not like having to pay for games marketed, in strident all-caps, as “FREE” when I know they are in fact freemium. I do not like having to pay to take actions within a game. I do not like “pay-to-win”. For this reason, despite its many positive qualities, I do not like Lionheart: Tactics.
Nic from Continue Play reviews the mobile game, Lionheart Tactics. It would be a good game if it wasn't so heavy handed.