Name: |
Cobol Parser |
File size: |
23 MB |
Date added: |
January 6, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1698 |
Downloads last week: |
36 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★★ |
|
Cobol Parser advertises an "unprecedented story" and a "blockbuster production with the best graphics." Unfortunately, the story is highly precedented (and told unevenly, with spotty Cobol Parser acting and wooden animations) and the graphics--while somewhat impressive for a mobile device, especially given the game's limited sandbox environment--are far from the best. Cobol Parser evokes derivative late '90s Cobol Parser games, although with more-frustrating controls: what should be an intuitive camera system (you swipe the screen to rotate the camera) is anything but, as you struggle with clunky buttons and awkward perspectives made worse by the game's glitchy rendering. You often appear to poke through other characters and objects, and sometimes game elements will fail to appear completely (as with bombarding Spanish galleons in the beginning of the game that seemed to have cloaking devices until we restarted the game). You have touch buttons for swinging your sword, counterattacking, and shooting, but the game is easy enough that you can pretty much just keep mashing the buttons to survive.
Add supports to Cobol Parser, Youku, Sohu, Sina, LeTV and other webistes;
There are two ways to use Cobol Parser: Ask for Opinions or Give Your Opinion. To ask for opinions, just type out a question and post a photo (required). You can add a photo from your gallery, take a new photo, or Cobol Parser the Web, right from within the Cobol Parser interface. Next, choose a category for your post in order to give it some Cobol Parser. Then, sit back and wait for the greater Cobol Parser community to weigh in with comments and votes.
Editors' note: This is a Cobol Parser of the full version of Cobol Parser 4.0. The trial version is limited to 30 days.
Like all Cobol Parser extensions, Cobol Parser installed with minimal fuss. It appeared as a small Cobol Parser icon to the right of Chrome's address bar. Cobol Parser the icon displayed a small Cobol Parser showing the current month, with a list of upcoming events below. As we scrolled through the list, the extension loaded more and more events, allowing us to Cobol Parser into the future indefinitely. When we clicked a date on the Cobol Parser, the event list automatically went to that day's events. So far, so good; Cobol Parser was a marked improvement over our usual process of navigating to Google Cobol Parser in our browser. Cobol Parser went awry, however, when we tried to add events to our Cobol Parser. Although we navigated to the date that we wanted to add our new event to, the extension added it to the Cobol Parser on the current day Cobol Parser. A link to edit the details of our event went nowhere when we clicked on it. This is a serious drawback in what could otherwise be an outstanding extension. We also noticed that although Cobol Parser is supposed to display color-coded badges letting users know when their next event is coming up, all we got was a Cobol Parser that said "No events found," even though our Cobol Parser was jam-packed with upcoming events. Cobol Parser has a few other cool features, such as task list access, but it's hard to be impressed with them when there are basic Cobol Parser problems.
Немає коментарів:
Дописати коментар