Category | Price | Seller | Device |
---|---|---|---|
Games | Free | Ben Guild | iPhone, iPad, iPod |
• If a dot has two or three neighbors, it automatically survives. Less or more... and it will die from overcrowding or under population.
• Any non-living (dead) cell with exactly three neighbors will respawn in the next generation.
Make interesting patterns and animations, while studying the interactions between neighbors, and more. An authentic incarnation of Conway's Game of Life. — For additional detail, generations are indicated by blue, yellow, and orange colors to signal 1st, 2nd, and 3rd generation dots respectively. Dots that the user has placed remain white until death.
Full iPad & iPhone / iPod touch support, with Retina vector graphics, iOS 7+ design elements/style, and fading transitions between generations. — Shake your phone to ripple the dots (bonus effect), or tap the "status bar" at the top of the screen to reset the grid without having to close the entire App.
This is a cool cell structure simulator. Very basic but interesting. This would be a neat platform for the dev to do some more engaging cell life cycle for the masses. (Think, skins for example.)
How do you even use this app? There are no instructions for what you're supposed to do. It's totally useless.
Does do what it says and looks nice. Without a start button or clear instructions, it's confusing how to begin the life cycles and with a delay between each, the charm of seeing things evolve isn't there.
It's dumb and makes no sence there is no start button no clear directions
I love the simplicity of the interface, and the coloring based on cell age is a nice touch.
Please make a button that starts the animation, it is nearly impossible to try to make a gun because of how quickly you have to work.
Starts automatically. Make changes on the fly. Like real life. Cleanest, simplest interface of any app in the world.