5/7/2020 Feed Me Oil 2
Channel oil into the gaping jaws of surreal living worlds in Feed Me Oil 2, the sequel to the groundbreaking and genre-defining Feed Me Oil. No FAQs/Guides/Maps - Be the first to submit one! No cheats - Be the first to submit one! No reviews - Be the first to submit one! Read reviews, compare customer ratings, see screenshots, and learn more about Feed Me Oil 2. Download Feed Me Oil 2 and enjoy it on your iPhone, iPad,.
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Quickly edit the videos you create with your iOS device or a GoPro camera with our first fresh app of the week, Givit Video Editor. The app makes it easy to quickly cut scenes together from one or multiple videos, as well as to create highlights as you’re shooting videos with your iOS device. Following that is Dumbstruck, a photo messaging app that records videos of users’ reactions when they receive messages. Finally, Feed Me Oil 2 challenges players to redirect liquids through various puzzle levels using different objects. Givit Video Editor update (Free)What’s it about?
Givit is a video editor designed to accommodate video files from users’ Camera Roll, from the cloud, and from GoPro Hero 3+ cameras.What’s cool? The cool feature for video editor app Givit is its ability to provide users with quick, easy ways to stitch together video scenes – either from the same video or multiple clips. It’s designed to work with footage from GoPro Hero 3+ cameras, as well as videos saved in the cloud or located on your iOS device’s Camera Roll. Even better, Givit allows users to highlight the best clips from videos as you’re shooting them live, so you can quickly put the best edits together later. There’s no limit on the number of videos you can stitch together or the length of the clips you create, and you can also add filters and other effects to your finished products. Givit Video Editor recently was updated with bug fixes and other feature improvements that make the app work even better.
Who’s it for? GoPro owners and fans of shooting videos with their iOS devices should give Givit a try.What’s it like? Other solid video-editing apps include iMovie and Directr. Dumbstruck (Free)What’s it about? Messaging app Dumbstruck is all about reactions – after a user sends a captioned photo to someone else, they receive a video of the second person reacting to what they received.What’s cool? Dumbstruck plays on the idea that you never get to see how people react to what you send them, especially when you’re sharing photos with your pals across the Internet. Dumbstruck fixes that issue; the app lets you send an image with a two-line caption to another user, and when they open that image, the app automatically captures their reaction in a short video and sends it back to you.
The app lets you know when you receive a message and that your reaction will be recorded, and also lets users know how long ago their messages were received and when they were accessed.Who’s it for? Users who like to share images and who would love to see how their friends react to those images should check out Dumbstruck.What’s it like? For more image sharing, you’ll also want to grab Snapchat. Feed Me Oil 2 ($2.99)What’s it about? Use various machines and implements to direct oil into designated locations in puzzler Feed Me Oil 2.What’s cool? Like its predecessor, Feed Me Oil 2 is a puzzle game about moving liquids around various levels. In order to do that, players use lots of different items, like jets, walls, fans and more, to redirect the flow of oil around various levels.
You’re able to position objects wherever you want in a level, as well as adjust them in various ways, and your score is based on how few objects you can use to solve any given scenario. Feed Me Oil 2 includes new levels and Facebook capabilities that let players share their highest ratings with friends.
Feed Me Oil is a physics-based puzzle game developed by Russian studio HolyWaterGames for iOS, Android, and Windows Phone devices. The game was released on the iTunes App Store in June 2011 and Google Play in July 2012, by publisher Chillingo Ltd. The Windows Phone version of the game was published by Electronic Arts and released on the Windows Phone Store in April 2012. The game was featured as the iPhone Game of the Week, as well as the number-one paid app in the United States and other countries.
Gameplay[edit]
The objective in the game is to fill the creature's mouth with oil (hence the game name). As the player progresses through the game by completing levels, subsequent levels become more complex. The amount of oil varies between level to level, and occasionally there are multiple creatures to feed oil to. Additionally, there may also be a certain color or type of oil that the creature wants. Players will be provided objects to use in order to guide the oil into the creature's mouth. Some of these provided objects include: solid bars, fans, oil filters, and tornados. Each of these objects perform a different task; for example, the fan will 'push' the oil in the direction that it is blowing. There are also special objects in some levels, such as buttons, which may activate another pathway or lift an obstacle in order to be able to complete the level. The less objects that the player uses to complete the level, the more points the player will be awarded. The amount of time it takes to complete the level is also a factor when calculating the score.
Additional level packs included with updates to the game introduced new special objects and mechanics, such as anti-gravity and oil-mixing.
![]() Development and release[edit]
Feed Me Oil was developed by independent game developer Alexander Ilin, and was published by Chillingo. Production began in August 2010, when Ilin was inspired to create a game with the core mechanic based around fluid after watching the trailer for The Unfinished Swan.[1] According to Ilin, his primary goal when developing Feed Me Oil was 'paying attention to every aspect of the design, from the physics to the graphics to the overall mechanics'.[2] He also attempted to create gameplay mechanics that would function on any mobile device, regardless of screen size.[2] The game was developed using Cocos2d.[3]
Feed Me Oil was first released for iOS devices on June 2, 2011.[4] In its initial week of release, it became the top selling app in several countries, including the United States, England, and Australia.[5] It was then released for the Windows Phone on April 30, 2012,[6]Android devices on July 3, 2012,[7] and PlayStation Mobile on June 26, 2013.[8] Ilin hired five people to help with developing updates after the game's release, and eventually founded Holy Water Games with his new employees.[2]
Reception[edit]
Feed Me Oil received positive reviewers from critics. The aggregate-review website Metacritic rated the iOS version 86/100, based on 17 reviews.[13]
References[edit]
External links[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Feed_Me_Oil&oldid=916653604'
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