Defeating these colourful creatures in battle gives you a chance of gaining them for your own collection. All these mechanics ensure that Battle Camp is a game with much longevity, far beyond what you might expect from a mobile game.Īs you progress through the game you encounter rarer and more powerful monsters. Naturally, certain elements are more effective against others - you might struggle to beat a group of water enemies using an all-fire team, and it's usually best to keep one monster of each element in your team at all times.īattle Camp features a cute and cartoony art style that belies its depth: PennyPop have incorporated many MMORPG systems including quests, raids, avatar customisation, world events, troops (the game's version of guilds), in-game chat, pets and PvP. You pick a team of five monsters from a large roster of 230 monsters, each of which is based on one of five different elements: water, fire, wind, leaf and rock. The premise is pretty simple: you join a summer camp in which kids collect monsters and battle each other. One quote on the App Store page for Battle Camp, the free-to-play MMO title from PennyPop, describes the game as ' Pokemon and World of Warcraft's love child'.It's a bold comparison, but unfortunately a heavy reliance on microtransactions and Facebook spam prevent this surprisingly ambitious title from reaching its potential. Reviews // 18th Oct 2013 - 10 years ago // By Matt Girdler Battle Camp Review
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