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Picking The Good Ones & Crabbing About The Bad Ones

More cross-platform games that run on Mac OS X

Wednesday Jun 11, 2008

Here’s a little tip for those who wish to acquire free games that run under OS X: Never overlook a web page full of links to Linux games just because you see the word Linux. Quite often, if you actually follow the link to any of those games, you’ll see that in fact there is an OS X version also.

Frets on Fire screenshot

And it is for that reason we will point you to this article: Introduction to Linux Gaming. It gives you screenshots and descriptions of three, and I quote here, “Native Linux games.” Of course, what they mean by native is that you don’t have to run the games under an emulator, not that the games have only Linux versions. As it turns out, of the three games listed (Neverball, Frets on Fire, and FlightGear), all three have Mac OS X versions available for download (although the one for Frets on Fire is labeled as “Experimental”). Check it out if you’re looking for some downloadable Mac games (and don’t let the word “Linux” fool you)!

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Stretch your mind with MacIago, an Othello/Reversi game for Mac OS X

Friday May 16, 2008

The weekend is upon us again, and with the record high price of car-go-zoom juice, a lot of folks here in the CrabApple Forest are looking for ways to keep ourselves amused without driving too far. There are games that just pass the time, and then there are games that make you think. Reversi, also known as Othello, definitely falls into the latter category. It’s an easy game to learn, but you’re not going to master it in a single weekend!

Here’s how Wikipedia describes the game:

Reversi and Othello are names for an abstract strategy board game which involves play by two parties on an eight-by-eight square grid with pieces that have two distinct sides. Pieces typically appear coin-like, but with a light and a dark face, each side representing one player. The object of the game is to make your pieces constitute a majority of the pieces on the board at the end of the game, by turning over as many of your opponent’s pieces as possible.

For more information on the game, including the rules of play, see the Wikipedia article on Reversi.

If you’ve never played Othello as a board game, it’s probably because all that manual chip-flipping can get pretty tedious, and few people have the patience for it. Of course, when computers came along, it became possible to let the computer do the chip-flipping, so the players could concentrate on the game, and that brought about a revival of interest. And, as it turns out, a computer can make a pretty good Othello opponent, in case you’re stuck at home alone and feel like playing something a bit more challenging than solitaire.

That’s where MacIago comes in. MacIago is a freeware Othello/Reversi style board game for Mac OS X.

MacIago main window

The MacIago options are shown here:

MacIago options

And if you don’t like the appearance of the board, there are a handful of plugins that can be downloaded to change it.

How good a game does MacIago play? Well, it could beat BigCrab, but then that’s not sayin’ much. We think that unless you are some sort of Othello master, you’ll find it a worthwhile opponent. And we like the fact that the difficulty level can be changed, so that if you’re teaching the game to the kids they won’t become frustrated because they always lose.

The only option that we think the game is missing is to flip the chips individually, in slow motion, so you can see exactly what’s being turned. Right now it just flips all the chips at once, so you are often left with that “What just happened?” feeling. Another nice option might be the ability to go back a turn or two - not only would that be helpful when you are learning the game, so you can see the relative effects of various possible moves, but also it would give you an opportunity to see exactly what changed in the last move. Even if you could simply click a button or hold down a key and have it highlight the chips that were flipped on the last turn, that would be helpful.

Even so, we think that MacIago is a great way to stretch your mind, and you can’t beat the price. So, what’s your favorite Mac OS X freeware game? Tell us in the comments and maybe we’ll review it in an upcoming post.

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Weekend fun with free Cubes game

Friday May 9, 2008

The deal here is that you can go and download this free game called Cubes, which comes in Mac and Windows versions. The company behind it offers several other games but most of them are not free, and you can’t tell which are free and which are not from the main page. You should assume that if you are downloading a demo version of one of their games, you’ll only be able to play a limited number of times. We suspect that Grass Games is giving away Cubes in the hope that you’ll come back and perhaps download something else and buy it (and this is reinforced by the fact that you see an ad for another of their games when you exit Cubes), but as far as we can tell you can play Cubes as often as you want without payment or registration.

So, what is Cubes? It’s a falling brick game - in other words, it’s whole lot like a very popular computer game of Russian origin, that’s been around for at least a couple decades now. The game is highly configurable and has more options than you might expect, and while we couldn’t find any documentation, the effects of most options are fairly obvious. The nice thing is that you can pick the screen resolution you want the game to run in (up to 1920×1200!) and run it in full screen mode, or in a window (interestingly, there seems to be a bug where you have to select your desired resolution while full screen mode is selected, and only then switch to windowed mode). If you run it in full screen mode, the effect is much like playing on an arcade machine, except that the sound of your Mac’s fan screaming may alert you to the fact that your CPU is being pushed to the max (unless maybe you have a newer multi-core system). You can mitigate this somewhat by going into the options and under the “MISC” section, set the “PROCESSING POWER” to a lower value.

Cubes options

Our screenshot (showing the options selections) don’t really do the game justice, because we selected a low screen resolution to minimize page download time. They could have used a typeface that renders a bit better, but it’s not as cramped as it looks here if you’re using a decent screen resolution. Not that it matters when you’re playing the game - you’re looking at colored falling bricks, which could probably be successfully rendered on an old Apple II, though the overall effect wouldn’t be nearly as good as what you are getting here.

We do wish this game didn’t monopolize the CPU quite so much (we watched the Activity Monitor during one run in Windowed mode and Cubes was far and away the biggest user of CPU power, even making Firefox look like a lightweight), but then we did play it quite successfully on a dual-core Mac Mini without any apparent problem (well, except for the fact that Big Crab stinks at these kinds of games!)

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