Age of Emerald
Low Cost Game Age of Emerald
Help the four magicians by using your skills to build the most splendid city in the entire world. Match building materials, splendid food, gold, and magical artifacts! Build a marvelous city for the King and host the King`s birthday party. With over 200 levels and 30 buildings to build, Age of Emerald has something for everybody! Collect over 30 different resources and use 5 magical bonuses to build your grand city!
- Magical bonuses.
- Unlimited play.
- Epic storyline!
size:19MB, OS:Windows 2000/XP/Vista
We Guarantee:
- 1,Quality tested and virus free.
- 2,No ads, no adware, no spyware.
Tags: Age of Emerald, disney, for, free, free disney game for kid, game, kid
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29 Comments so far for Age of Emerald
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Two points:
First, you might want to note to your readers that the absence of any “try before you buy” option isn’t something for which *this* adventure game should be faulted. At a guess, it’s a true for more than 95% of adventure games being sold on the Web. The downloads are simply too large, or so at least we’re told.
Second, you have a “download and try for free!” button at the end of the review. Good sense of irony, there. Unfortunately, it’s inaccurate. While it links you to Big Fish Games’ offering of this title, the game still can’t be downloaded.
This is a wonderful game but it is a true adventure game, not a casual game. You can find a walkthrough online and the game was well worth the money. 5-star game for sure.
@Balakirev, you do raise a good point, but we’re not trying to be ironic. it’s more bad planning on our part:)
unfortunately, when we originally built the site, we set it up so that the default was this “download free trial button” not anticipating huge downloads and the “buy and download” model. we anticipate fixing this in the future (having this new type of button) but in meantime, Gamezebo users have made it clear to us that they like these big adventure style games so we want to keep reviewing and writing tips for them.
thanks,
joel
Two points:
First, you might want to note to your readers that the absence of any “try before you buy” option isn’t something for which *this* adventure game should be faulted. At a guess, it’s a true for more than 95% of adventure games being sold on the Web. The downloads are simply too large, or so at least we’re told.
Second, you have a “download and try for free!” button at the end of the review. Good sense of irony, there. Unfortunately, it’s inaccurate. While it links you to Big Fish Games’ offering of this title, the game still can’t be downloaded.