I’ve also seen little to no need to pick up booster packs, largely because I’ve been getting plenty of card packs for finishing missions.
I’m still receiving enough refresh items to keep my energy levels high, and when they run low I don’t feel overly put out by waiting for a little while. Battles still feel very much like Top Trumps, and, generally, nothing has really picked up pace or changed.Įven my Supremium levels have remained high. It’s still very much a case of tapping away on a button as the amount of energy you have in reserve depletes. The adventure continues, and I’ve returned to the first story arc to gain more experience before moving onto newly unlocked mission arcs. So far, Supreme Heroes looks to be a rather generic, if slickly produced, card-battler. And when you do, it's of little concern as you get 40 Supremium just for connecting to Facebook, which also allows you to utilise cloud saves and play online against others. So far, you level-up so quickly that you don't really need to bother with this. Once this happens you'll have to wait for it to replenish (which it seems to do rather quickly) or purchase a full-heal using the in-game currency of Supremium. These missions, while slickly presented in comic-book style editions and story arcs, come down to little more than pressing a button over and over until your energy depletes. The meat of the game is in playing missions and levelling-up so that you can face off against others in PvP online battles. Seeing as I'm a sucker for most things superhero-related Supreme Heroes already has me hooked in for some crime-fighting fun.Īfter being whisked through the tutorial - which boils down to pressing a button and waiting to see whether I've won a Top-Trumps-style battle based on my character attributes -I can start to customise my hero and lose myself in menus.Īnd I really mean that - there's an abundance of menu screens here, all waiting for you to merge abilities together (known as "mutating") or fuse equip-able items to increase your power. In fact, there are so many that there's probably at least one tailored to your own particular theme of preference, whether that be Star Trek, pirates, or Victorian tableware.Īmong the most newest titles on the market is EA's Supreme Heroes, and and it seeks to tap right into your love of comics and superheroes. Click on the link to jump straight to day three.įree-to-play card collecting and battling games are hardly a rare occurrence on the Google Play Store. That's what the strange sub-headings are all about. This is a freemium game review, in which we give our impressions immediately after booting a game up, again after three days, and finally after seven days.