But some mobile games are highly addictive—even if they’re supposed to be casual. I’m not saying you shouldn’t play mobile games when you’re not waiting in line (or pooping), but you probably shouldn’t play them all the time. Not sure if you’ve been playing too many games on your phone If you’re dreaming about Clash of Clans, you almost certainly are.
You know exactly how Liz Lemon feels, thanks to Wordament, Ruzzle, and Word Streak With Friends.
Nothing spells romance like verbal prowess, right Back in 2012, Zynga polled its Words With Friends users and found that 10 percent had hooked up with an opponent (while 46 percent claimed to be ‘crushing’ on a current opponent).
This list is tongue-in-cheek, but even I can’t make this up: one poor soul had Puzzle & Dragons deleted from his phone by his jealous girlfriend (she was jealous of the game).
There’s a limited-time in-game event going on. You can’t risk not getting that completely useless (and not even very cool-looking) decoration just because you were doing something stupid, like sleeping.
You’re still playing Alphabear. You’ll stop after this next round. Er, the next one. Three more rounds. Five.
If you’re lucky, you wake up with savant-like knowledge on how to beat level 1052.
Freemium games might make you wait for stuff, but you have a system: You play so many freemium games that by the time you’re done cycling through all of them, the first game is ready to play again!
Because you routinely spend that much on in-game currency. You may need to rethink your finances.
You may not be a soft, pasty, gamer stereotype, but don’t think that looking at your phone all the time isn’t taking its toll on your body.
Instead of admiring an interesting piece of architecture, you think…if there were a green pig on the other side of that building, at what angle would I have to hit it with an exploding black bird in order to knock it down and kill the pig