^ Blown away These guys made pretty much the perfect iPhone game...arcade matching with just a bit of strategy and flawless one-finger controls with stuff/points exploding everywhere. It honestly makes me want to delete about 10 games from my phone. 5 stars and a must download IMO.
Once you play polished iOS games you never want to go back I only keep 3-5 games on my iPhone 4 at any one time
Yeah, I have quite a few, but they are in a variety of genres. Heck, I have an entire folder of just "Matching". This game seems to combine everything the iPhone does well in a really polished and clever way. That said, it didn't take to long to crack the code on how to game the system, and I can run up a score almost indefinitely just by keeping the right monster on screen at all times.
3 to 5 games? My sig alone are should-not-be-deleted titles. LOL. Yeah, those who dont have MAMC and dont download it yet deserve to be shot.
Dont like to bloat my iPhone 4 with unneccessary apps I try to keep only the apps that are essential to me, rarely keep a game if i beat it. In addition to finding the apps i need faster (one page of apps, two folders), it seems after using two or three of my friends' iPhone 4 that excess games/apps cause significant slowdown (this is from first hand observations with 3-5 iphone 4 and 1-2 iphone 4s -- all phones were loaded up with games and unnecessary apps that the user probably only opens once or twice a month. Those are the reasons I like to keep my apps clean and simple in two folders: Right now my games in order of which I play the most: -Subway Surfer -Zombie Carnaval -Ski Safari -MAMC -Little Things I also try to keep the third party apps to a min as well: -Atomic Web Browser -Flashlight -Flipboard -Navignon -Sparrow -Spotify -Swackett
Apps left running will slow down your phone. Those installed, but not actually running, should have no effect on performance. Double-clicking the home button to load the task bar and deleting unwanted apps from there will free up resources being used by them by ending the task, but not uninstall them. Power cycling does the same thing for all running apps, of course.