


Of course, Dragon City has provided those who are impatient (and rightfully so) with the option to speed up the process with gems. Upgrading habitats, breeding the dragons, hatching their eggs (breeding and hatching are two seperate events), expanding, growing food, clearing obstacles, everything. Everything takes hours, sometimes more than a day, to happen. They make everything go very very slowly after the forth base dragon is introduced. This game is a cute front for capturing the attention of enchanted children with cool, cute, and funny dragon designs, with the intent of manipulating their innocence and impatience to leech money out of their parent's bank accounts. A problem that many of the reviews here have pointed out. All of them are, of course, asking for your money. At one point I had to close twelve before I could play the game. At the least there is five ads that you have to close, one by one, to get to your islands. The first thing I was met with after booting up the game for the first time after the tutorial was the amount of promotional ads I was hit with. It is interesting to breed two dragons and to see what comes out of that pairing by combining their elements.Īnd that's all of the good things I have to say about Dragon City. Some (not all) of the designs are creative and cool. The graphics are polished, the mechanics are interesting, the combat is simple enough for a child to understand. In short, I regret sinking in so much time, because this game has so many flaws that dwarf its pros so dramatically that you shouldn't even bother considering playing this game. I've played it for almost two weeks now, trying to get down to the core of what this game is. For the record, I have given this game an honest chance.
