Instead of trying to shoehorn in ill - suited interfaces and control systems, Battleheart strips out all the fluff and bullshit of real time strategy and RPG, and leaves only the parts that actually make
sense on a touchscreen device.
Not exact matches
It's probably not as fancy of a
device as you might have predicted, but it's definitely a notetaker's dream thanks to its stylus - dependant 2450 dpi resistive
touchscreen display (which obviously makes no
sense, but according to ASUS means the screen is really striking and «gives the user the feel of writing
on paper»).
Priced at $ 199, the myTouch 4G Slide has all the hallmarks of being a successful Android
device — it features a 3.7 - inch smallish
touchscreen display, a full physical four - row QWERTY keypad for easy texting, an 8MP camera to keep any amateur photo enthusiast happy, and HTC's own eye candy,
Sense 3.0, layered
on top of Gingerbread 2.3.4 operating system.
Packed with Aluminum unibody design, HTC EVO Design 4G runs Android 2.3.4 Gingerbread OS with HTC
Sense 3.0
on top of it, featuring a 4 - inch qHD capacitive
touchscreen display with 540 X 960 pixels of resolution, powered by a 1.2 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon S2 MSM7630 single - core processor, 768 MB RAM to speed up the
device, packed with a 5 megapixels rear - facing camera to record 720p videos, paired up with an additional front - facing 1.3 MP camera to make video calls, microSD card slot for memory expansion up to 32 GB, 8 GB microSD card included, micro USB 20, Bluetooth 3.0, 802.11 Wi - Fi b / g / n connectivity, 3G / 4G Mobile Hotspot supporting up to eight Wi - Fi enabled
devices, Android Market, and a whole host of the Google services.
As stated many times already, having a full
touchscreen display
on the rear and adding the Yota Mirror functionality makes this
device leaps and bounds ahead of the first generation model that just didn't quite make
sense.