

#MORE INFO WILL BE COMING CROSSWORD FOR ANDROID#
If you're keen on giving the game a go, you can download Crossword Farm: Connect & Grow on the iOS App Store and the Google Play Store for Android devices. The game's localisation features include options for English or Swedish, with future plans as the development of the game continues. Players can also look forward to seasonal events and regular updates, as well as limited-time themed decors, story events, exclusive puzzles and more. This is a splendid example of how a standard theme type can be played upon to perfection, built around some creative connections I might never have imagined myself.The game boasts challenging crossword puzzles as well that will help Jenny, the main protagonist, acquire the right tools to improve the farm. It's no secret that Sunday NYT puzzles sometimes underwhelm me. If you're in this camp, I'll plead to you to focus on the fantastic theme and look past any weird-factor grumpiness. have the potential to do so, as words not heard in everyday conversation. I've gotten tons of feedback that it only takes a small handful of oddballs to sour people's experience, and ORONYM / ARIOSE, FLUMES / ALLELE, IRAIL, etc. I do wonder if some solvers' dreaded "weird alert" will be triggered.
#MORE INFO WILL BE COMING CROSSWORD FULL#
A shame that the full GOTHAM CITY wasn't the grid entry since that would be harder to miss. works okay for GI JOES, but - as in Bruce Wayne - is such a creative link to GOTHAM City. Oh! Two short bonus answers that I nearly missed. Ironic for someone who's binged every season of roughly 50 shows in the past year. I could not figure out how BINGE WATCHER linked to. FIVE was more literal than I wanted, but near it was the highlight. I was so thankful to uncover something completely different, a T SHIRT CANNON firing tees, or shirt tops. I read and figured it would hint at a weapon high up. My solving experience kept ratcheting up, too. I've done so many of these types of "reinterpretation" puzzles that it's rare for an example like this to shine so brightly. "Star Trek" describes this … how? Then it dawned on me, that it perfectly encapsulates a star's trek into the Oscars. I was so pleasantly thrown off-kilter by THE RED CARPET. Thanks, as always to the editing team for all their great work. I'll leave you with a few of my favorites that didn't make the cut: It should surprise no one that "man" was the most common word by far, almost doubling each of the runners-up ("night" and "love"). Out of curiosity I did a count of each unique word across a sample of 10k or so films, omitting articles, prepositions, and conjunctions. While short-listing movies for theme potential, I noticed that a solid 20% of my options contained "man" (without even including compounds like "gentleman," "Englishman," "Superman," etc.).

It was for the best though, as this version is much improved.

While I might give solvers more credit re Bowie songs, I suppose it's fair to assume not everyone recalls Ethan Hawke vehicles from 1991 that grossed $6M worldwide. My initial submission had "Mystery Date?" as one of the theme clues and LIFE ON MARS as the answer for "Space Jam?", but there were concerns these might not be well-known enough. I'm thrilled to be back in the NYT with my first Sunday puzzle.
