If youre going to start start back up, make sure you do before the 25th. Every year they gift users a special chest for their loyalty. It has always been the cheapest premium nonevent character that you don’t already have. ...Although, with way things have been going, it wouldn’t surprise me at all if that chest ends up being downgraded to either a chance, or random tokens. Although, “Heres 3 gems. Murray Chrimbo!” sounds about right.
My analysis is this: We will never defeat the curse on the kingdom, Similar style games (Simpsons Tap Out, My Little Pony) are still continuing and they started before DMK.
Simpsons has an end. You get to a certain level, complete all the quests, and end up getting a Mount Rushmore style prize with a character carved in. Each insane level awards you a new character carving. Only thing new for the game are limited timed events.
I think EA does it right, in that you can finish the quests without paying for content. If you pay for content, you actually receive it. There’s no gamble. You buy a building or a character, not a chance at it. These purchases give you additional quests. The game has been around since 2012, and EA hasn’t given up on it. This Disney game however... ...remember the 50th anniversary of
Disneyland? VMK... ...By far a better game than this app, and it was launched 10 years before this one. Disney shut it down after 3 years. This game, supposedlay celebrating the 60th, despite having completely made up attractions, had been around for 4, and I’m honestly surprised. They must be making money somehow. But I always felt like this was the sort of game one might invest real money in, and then have Gameloft pull the plug. You never own anything. You’re only owning the privilege of playing with it.
It's been awhile since I checked in. This has to be the most boring event ever. How often can we search for someone? Only plus is getting Elsa who was my only missing Frozen character.
The Frozen Singalong at MGM/DHS is the same way. The historians are actually quite good at what they do, but everyone on stage (including most of the children in the audience) are asking “Where’s Elsa?”