A superbly original and exceptionally presented colour matching tactical game that's all too brief. This should be remedied when the extra episodes are released.
The graphics are stellar, the music and sounds are amazing, and the controls are straightforward and intuitive. The mashup of match-three puzzle RPG and tactical strategy works out incredibly well, and the game is challenging with high replay value. The variety in mission objectives also offers up something new for each mission, so it’s not always the same thing for every level. And if you like a good dystopian sci-fi story, then Ticket to Earth has that too. And for what it’s worth, the RPG aspect of the game, in terms of character skills and upgrades, is surprisingly in-depth. Ticket to Earth is a keeper, and is one of the more enjoyable titles that have been released so far this year (and it’s been a good year for games).
the amount of depth to the story, could make for a 5 season tv series. the gameplay mechanics, variety of unique characters with unique abilities. i can hardly think **** of equal value for my ipad
The story is incredible with depth and meaning to everything that happens. It's like a better version of starwars, and the combat is an equal highpoint with so many ways to customize through skill trees , attribute scores, and special abilities done in a way that is unique and appealing. The only thing that is not on part with the writing and fighting is the art which is done probably in a way that is kind of like batman the animated series, which i felt also had good stories, but not my favorite art style. The is probably the best value you can get for your money considering there was only one episode when i first got this and still had a blast, but now there are three.
Despite the frustrating randomness of Ticket to Earth, I had a really great time with the game. Between the interesting characters and (eventually) satisfying combat, I can't wait to see what's in store in episode two.
Ticket to Earth is not a book by Sartre. One need not spend too much time assessing it in depth. However, the player is clearly not going to suffer the dreaded death by PowerPoint; the theme of the rich and powerful exploiting everybody else creates enough interest (and, sadly, relevance) to lift Ticket to Earth into more than just another tile based mobile game. It even meant yours noobishly had no problems whatsoever going through the grind required to upgrade my character to a level I could actually make progress with. I needed to know what’s going to happen!
There’s a really cool and enjoyable puzzle strategy game in Ticket to Earth. The problem is all the supposedly random bits end up making things feel unfair. Failing a level because the tiles happened to spawn in a way to help an enemy chase me down isn’t challenging, it’s cheap. Missing out on collecting important items on the board because they often appear where enemies can grab them first isn’t fun, it’s frustrating. I really, really want to like Ticket to Earth, but I just don’t have the patience for its poor balancing.
Good Story touches on a lot of human themes that has an eye on the big picture, gets you stirred up. Slightly cheesy characters and dialogue, yet very deep and well developed characters. Good music. Good Combat, yet simple enough. I can't imagine who wouldn't enjoy this game.
Legitimately one of the prettiest games I’ve played. Characters are sort of tropey, but the story is enjoyable. Powers feel meaty and cool. The only thing is that the game ‘ended’ (two chapters are out so far) before I got to upgrade nice and fully.
Fun game, novel mechanics which enhance game play. Great artwork and design coupled with a great story, fun progression of skills/inventory. Can't wait for episode 2!
SummaryA distant planet. A dying colony. A deadly conspiracy. The mining boom has left New Providence to die, and just one Earthbound ship remains. Survivor Rose stands in defiance of a broken system. Rise up with fast-paced RPG tactics, and battle across vibrant fields of color. Join the fight in Ticket to Earth, a sci-fi tale of betrayal and ...