Fail to take advantage of the environment properly, or to use your company's various talents and abilities efficiently, and you'll end up having to
replay the level until you get it right (or lower the difficulty).
If the time counts down, you die and have to
replay the level, never knowing what you were supposed to do, as there's no obvious solution in the room.
This game has a high
replay level and constant action plus great teamwork and friendship themes.
Weapon variety also play a major role as each level is to be completed using a specific weapon recommended by everyone's favourite horseshoe crab, Sheldon — however you are free to
replay any level, with the weapon of your choice.
You always start in the Leaky Cauldron and can
replay a level with the characters you've unlocked or abscond to Diagon Alley to enter cheat codes and spend your studs on new characters.
You can
replay any level, any time, once it's been unlocked.
Still, it has a solid content value, also including an «arcade» mode that lets
you replay a level with any weapon.
The ability to
replay any level and two game modes, a timed and a casual untimed mode, means that you'll get plenty of playtime from this absorbing title.
The level of explosion you will create in that fifteen minute boss battle will leave you wanting to
replay the level again and again.
Maps are procedurally generated, meaning the layout is never the same every time
you replay a level.
It is however, a lot of fun and you can go back and
replay any level you want.
Once you figure out the quickest path — dying a whole lot in the process — you use the time - out ability and
replay the level with the new - found knowledge.
You're gonna have to rearrange the Oxylane at certain points, and if you don't make things right, items will be missed, obstacles will stand on the way, enemies will catch you, and Princess Ming will be no more..., at least until you have a chance to
replay the level.
Some have the instant respawns, while others make
you replay the level.
All things considered, Cloudberry Kingdom is a fun, challenging, and rewarding platformer that will always be a somewhat new experience no matter the amount of times
you replay a level.
To
replay any level, fortress, and castle, beat every level in the game.
Along with cutscene dialogue that shifts and changes when you're required to
replay a level, dynamic lighting and a special physics system that makes characters run, leap, fall, and walk in often unique and natural ways, expect Liberty City to be an amazing recreation of the «Big Apple» and it's citizens.
If you are running low on resources, you can attempt to
replay a level that you already completed on a higher difficulty setting.
You can
replay a level to get different rewards depending on your preference.
Grueling in its difficulty, yet cunning in its delivery more so, the necessity on getting every split - second move or decision right may put off some, but those keen to stick with it — even
replay a level a few more times thereafter — will quickly discover Tropical Freeze's loop isn't so easy to put down.
With little - to - no depth on offer and a levelling system that forces players into
replaying levels numerous times ad nauseam, Aces of the Luftwaffe is a solid yet uninspired experience.
It's fun to play only with another person, and i would go and
replay some levels with the upgraded magic and weapons.
I had little desire to
replay levels, even though the enemy placements change every time.
If you are a completionist like me you may have a hard time collecting everything as
replaying the levels over again (which you have to do at least once) can get boring pretty quickly.
Add to this a scoring system that awards stars for completing certain objectives, such as disabling an alarm or finding an epic piece of loot, and SteamWorld Heist provides plenty of incentive to go back and
replay levels for maximum reward.
I focused on Camilla, Rowen, Lissa, and Chrom — and by that I mean I used my scarce master seals to advance their classes — but if you have the time and wherewithal to
replay levels, you could make an army worthy of taking on the hardest difficulty.
All this means you don't have much reason to
replay levels other than to get gold medals.
This game really does its best to do everything right like including multiple secret costumes (some from the previous movies), the ability to
replay levels which can be selected from your apartment, and even more options become available after you complete the game.
The secret Challenge Mode in New Super Mario Bros. allows you to
replay levels you've completed in a new way.
With that said, the target audience — younger gamers — are probably more willing to
replay levels over and over again.
It did a good job of reminding us why we loved those old games - full of secrets and incredibly well polished, I must have sank 30 hours into it,
replaying levels over and over.
Filled with hours of content, frustration, and addiction, I'm still going back to
replay levels I know I can get a better time on.
There's a wide variety of towers to choose from and this can make
replaying levels feel new and fresh, or at least it should.
If you like past LEGO games, enjoy
replaying levels over and over with different characters to get 100 % completion or want to entertain your child for hours on end, this one's for you.
The fact that the challenges require certain numbers of trophies to unlock means that
replaying levels over and over is the order of the day, whether due to missing the target, failing or simply because the game decides to break.
If we're
replaying levels, we want to play as Tails.
The game does allow you to
replay levels in order to beat your own person times as well and you can compete in the time trial mode which is online play and lets you compare your scores with others as well.
If you're a fan of 2048 and want to challenge yourself, the time - attack and challenge modes are great and
replaying levels can easily consume several hours on your daily commute or a long car journey, but they're definitely not worth paying # 4.49 for when you can get the original mobile game for free.
You unlock arcade mode upon finishing the game, but all that consists of is a stage select where you have the option to
replay levels and collect missing memories or be timed and climb the leaderboards.
Throw in a no death rule and you are set up for an interesting way to go back and
replay levels from the game.
If you can't see
yourself replaying the level more than two or three times then it's probably best to just wait for the full release.
Replaying levels is easy too.
Replaying the levels is definitely encouraged, though.
That would make
replaying levels a bit more interesting.
Jewels really aren't all that hard to come by, though, and you can always
replay levels to get more.
Completing a level displays two leaderboards, one showing your time and the other the score, demanding that
you replay the levels in an attempt to beat those random virtual people who you'll likely never meet in your entire life.
There's this quality to the gameplay that can't be put into words that simply makes you want to
replay levels over and over to improve your time, to clear that obstacle smoother and to beat your friend who just destroyed your time by two seconds.
Replaying the levels becomes addictive as they're short and sweet, allowing you to easily memories them and focus on simply getting the best run you can.
Throw in a method of comparing scores with friends and you'll almost always breed at least a small amount of competition with which to tempt players back, but sadly I never personally felt much of an urge to
replay levels for higher scores Your rewards for doing well include new designs for your sheep, such as the 8 - bit look.
In my honest opinion, a lot of bullet hell games mask the fact that they aren't hugely long by ramping up the difficulty to a level that's so high that you have to
replay the levels a hundred times to get anywhere.