Fuzzy Wuzzy Games
What exactly is an Indie Developer? No longer a small, independent developer who cannot find a publisher or create large scale games, the term has evolved to encompass more and more game producing teams. In recent years, the number of Indie Devs has increased to the point where the term is thrown around almost randomly, as everyone jumped onto the bandwagon. In a sense these developers produce what can be described as a range of budget to average priced games.
The author reviews Armillo, a new and exciting puzzle games by indie developer Fuzzy Wuzzy games.
The review is fair. Even if I disagree with the final score, the points made in the review are valid. The game plays OK but the story is pointless, the graphics are a bit bland and the game sometimes judders and stutters (once freezing for about a second on me). Apparently they'll be patching the framerate/freezing issues though.
Overall it's still fun and playable, especially for the price. Worth an "OK" 70-75/100 IMHO.
NE: If you had asked me, as little as ten days ago, what I knew about Armillo, I would have been able to reply, honestly, that I had heard the name… and that’s all. So it was with great excitement and anticipation that I sat down to play this debut release from Vancouver-based indie studio, Fuzzy Wuzzy Games.