See how the little crane is conquering the world one country at a time. Read what the press has to say about the game, and also the user feedback:
Brilliant. The most addictive game I have found! Love it. We need more games from this guy!
UK app store user review, jan 28 2011
Super Steuerung, pragmatische Grafik. Bin sehr zufrieden.
German app store review (jhg82), jan 28 2011
A very nice simulation, more of that!
Swiss app store review (RSC769), jan 27 2011
It is creative apps like this that keep me on the mac app store not bad ports of old pc games
Lisa Whitt, sep 3 2011
Reviews 45 heroic crossing in the winter of 1810-11 of the Athabasca Pass opened a route used by trappers for many years. Included, too, is a record of explorations by Dr. James Hector of the British-backed Palliser Expedition, scientists who, in mid-19th century, sought to learn more of western Canada. An amusing aspect of Whyte's treatment of the history of the climbing of the Rockie's greatest peaks (between 1894 and 1925) is his account of the proprietary attitudes of climbers toward what they regarded as "their" mountains .and their attempts to achieve the first ascents; the conqueror of Mt. Assiniboine met his packer secretly in early morning and was rushed to his target in two days instead of the usual three. Inclusion of an excellent, understandable, exposition of geological theories as to origins of mountain systems seems the source of what must be editorial error. The reader, following the 1858 movement of the Hector party, encounters the geological material; then, without warning transition, finds himself with a party of mountain climbers in 1896. In the first section of the text and two later, much shorter ones, "Mountain Spring, Mountain Summer," and "Mountain Autumn, Mountain Winter ," Whyte shows himself to be much more than a writer of terse, forceful exposition. An almost lyrical quality characterizes his description of what one who roams the mountains may see, feel, hear, smell as the seasons transform the high country. Readers who have been much in the mountains will find the writing highly evocative. Of Sugin6's more than 50 photographs, best reproduction is achieved in dose-ups of flora, rock faces and moving water, and some of the longrange shots from helicopter. There is some over-emphasis in the number of broad and vertical views with the wide-angle lens. The printers may be responsible for some lack of color balance, with much concentration on rather unnatural blue shades, and the appearance of scratches on some pictures. The subject matter, however, the loom of peaks, the pitch of wild water, the glow of alpine meadow, the eroded and crevassed surface of the glacier: these can only stir the pulse of the fireside reader. REX E. ROBINSON, Logan, Utah The Westem Writings of Stephen Crane. Edited by Frank Bergon. (New York: New American Library, 1979. 240 pages, $1.95.) An excellent book for teachers and students of western American literature. The Introduction is learned, concise, well written, and relatively comprehensive. Based upon the University of Virginia edition, the text is sound and, amazingly for a paperback these days, contains very few typo- 46 Western American Literature graphical errors. The Bibliography is incomplete, but is somewhat by the inclusion of Milne Holton's Cylinder of Vision, the best Crane study. Western Writings is not a paperback version of Katz's Stephen Crane the West and Mexico (1970). Katz's book, unlike Bergon's contains little Crane's western fiction, and his Introduction is largely confined to ....1I1.",
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