Bermuda Triangle: Saving The Coral now on the iPhone

Northpole Studio and Bulkypix are pleased to present Bermuda Triangle: Saving The Coral. This brilliantly colorful ocean-based puzzle game with a decidedly 'green' theme is now available at the App Store for $1.99.

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gamertvnetwork.com

PlatformNation: Bermuda Triangle: Saving the Coral Review

PlatformNation: For a game that totes itself as “green-themed”, it is ironic you kill snails by dropping anchors on them. Does the world really need another match-3 game? The only clones I love are Dolly and the ones from Star Wars.

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platformnation.com
20°
6.5

NWR: Bermuda Triangle: Saving the Coral Review

NWR writes: "Bermuda Triangle: Saving the Coral is an educational title with a fun puzzle mechanic at its core. It is a match-three puzzle game, like many that have come before it, and the game's unique twist is that instead of falling objects, as in most Tetris-style puzzlers, Bermuda deals in floating objects. On the top screen is a boat that fires gems into the ocean, which resides on the bottom screen. As you fire gems into the ocean, they float to the surface. If the surface is too crowded, they will float below the gems above them in a pyramid fashion. When three gems match in a row, they vanish, and spread nutrients to the ocean floor where coral grows. When enough coral has grown, the stage ends."

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nintendoworldreport.com
10°
6.0

Gamezone: Bermuda Triangle: Saving the Coral Review

From Storm City games, Bermuda Triangle: Saving the Coral is a light puzzler with an environmental theme, having the player match up colored pods in order to save and protect coral reefs. The game is pretty simple to grasp, offering basic "match-3" puzzle gameplay albeit in a slightly changed form, and with an environmentally concerned subplot thrown in. The game doesn't really switch up the puzzle format too much, opting for a fairly traditional experience without many bells or whistles thrown in. The simplicity of the game will make it fairly easy for newcomers to get into, but might shy away more serious puzzle game fans looking for a real challenge.

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nds.gamezone.com