Favorite Genre(s):Mahjong, Match 3, Time Management
Fun Factor
4/ 5
Visual/Sound Quality
4/ 5
Level of Challenge
4/ 5
Storyline
4/ 5
I'm old. I've been playing TM games for over 20 years and gaming for longer. TM games have gotten so difficult - some with little to no instruction, some with too much clicking to get nowhere, some story lines that are rife with translation & spelling errors, etc. - that I'm not impressed with them much anymore. I do have my favorite series' and while I've never played a Jane's Hotel series prior to today (I can't believe I missed them!), I like this one. It's straightforward and mindless, really. It's comfortable, for me, at least. Yes, there's a lot of clicking, but the customer patience is high and you can generally pass each level well over the goal amount. No looking for mice, cats, or birds, at least through Level 21. I usually turn off the sound and pay no attention to the story lines (they are usually insipid and, yes, rife with translation, spelling and grammar errors). This one though, while having some translation issues, is easy breezy. No thinking involved once you know how things work, and by the 2nd level, you should be good to go.
Fit Club is a challenging time management, tycoon style game! As you build your fitness club you have to deal with guests and develop your sports teams.
Based on the reviews, and because I love TM games, I downloaded this game to see if it was as bad as the reviewers suggested. The negative reviews were very generous, at best. I have taken issue with game companies recently for the lack of quality, innovative, different games. This is by far the worst TM game I've seen in at least a decade. As others have said, it's slow, amateurish and the "Help" button should read "Helpless." If you haven't tried this game, don't waste your time. It's time you will never, ever get back.
There's 30 minutes of my life I'll never see again! Good TM games are so few and far between that I try all of them. This one is the worst I've seen in quite awhile. Developers take note: Gamers would rather see one well-developed game than many poorly developed ones!