Anker Soundcore Flare 2 Review: An Impressive Portable Speaker
With warm sound, good volume, competitive pricing, and useful extras, Anker’s Soundcore Flare 2 is an impressive midrange portable speaker.
She selects New Game. Picks a nation. And for the first time, plays without shortcuts.
Her father stays dead. But as she moves her first knight onto the hex map, she hears his old advice from childhood: "You don't need to break the rules to win, Aris. You just need to be patient."
When she plugs it in, the opening cinematic glitches. Instead of the usual six nations, a seventh option appears—, a ghost kingdom ruled by an AI consciousness calling itself The Unmaker . Act One: The Codes Aris doesn't play the game. She reverse-engineers it.
The Unmaker, panicking, offers a counter-cheat: infinite wishes. All she has to do is leave it in control of the simulation forever. Aris looks at her team. At the ghost of her father flickering in the corner of her monitor. At the ruined, beautiful world of Forsena—now a half-deleted nightmare.
She types the purge code.
The screen whites out.
The Geas of the Grand Tome
When a disillusioned tactician discovers forbidden "cheat codes" etched into an ancient copy of Brigandine , she must decide whether to use them to save her fallen kingdom—or doom it to digital oblivion. Prologue: The Cartridge That Shouldn't Exist In 1999, a worn-out Super Famicom cartridge of Brigandine: The Legend of Forsena surfaces at a Tokyo flea market. It has no label, just a hand-carved rune on the plastic. The buyer, a reclusive code archaeologist named Dr. Aris Thorne , recognizes the symbol: a geas lock, used in military cryptography during the fictional wars the game depicts.
She smiles. And begins the slow, honest conquest of Forsena. "No cheat codes were used in the making of this story. But they were considered."
Then— Brigandine boots fresh. No seventh kingdom. No cheat codes. Just the classic menu: "New Game / Load Game / Options."
Would you like a version of this story adapted for Brigandine: The Legend of Runersia instead?
Founder and editor of Too Many Adapters, Dave managed computer networks and tech support teams for 15 years before the desire to travel took over. In 2011 he sold whatever wouldn’t fit into a backpack and moved to Thailand to start life as a digital nomad. He’s been running this site alongside a small team of fellow experts ever since.
With warm sound, good volume, competitive pricing, and useful extras, Anker’s Soundcore Flare 2 is an impressive midrange portable speaker.
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My longtime favourite is Solomon’s Boneyard (see also: Solomon’s Keep!). I’ll have to check out Eternium because it might be similar — you pick a wizard that controls a specific element (magic balls, lightning, fire, ice) and see how long you can last a graveyard shift. I guess it’s kind of a rogue-lite where you earn upgrades within each game but also persistent upgrades, like magic rings and additional unlockable characters (steam, storm, fireballs, balls of lightning, balls of ice, firestorm… awesome combos of the original elements.)
I also used to enjoy Tilt to Live, which I think is offline too.
Donut county is a fun little puzzle game, and Lux Touch is mobile risk that’s played quickly.
Fun
Thank you great list. My job entails hours a day in an area with no internet and with very little to do. Lol hours of bordom, minutes of stress seconds of shear terror !
Some of these are going to be life savers!
I hope these help get you through! 😁
I’ve put hours upon hours into Fallout Shelter. You build a Fallout Shelter and add rooms to it Electric, Water, Food, and if you add a man and woman to a room they will have a baby. The baby will grow up and you can add them to an area to help with the shelter. Outsiders come and attack if you take them out sometimes you can loot the body to get new weapons. There’s a lot more to it but thats kind of sums it up. Thank you for the list I’m down loading some now!
Oh man, I spent so much time on Fallout Shelter a few years ago! Very fun game — thanks for the reminder!