

There have been no great leaps in the online department, with multiplayer stuck resolutely in single phone-sharing territory. One for the budding Starbucks employee, perhaps. No, we have no idea why you'd want to know what goes into a Corretto (it's a coffee with a shot of liquor, usually grappa or brandy) in between bouts of dominoes, but there you are. These goodies take the form of new accessories for your avatar (such as a snazzy pair of Chinos) as well as a number of hot drink recipes. The aim is to accrue points and climb the rankings ladder, unlocking a variety of goodies along the way. The central challenge lies with Career mode, where you play against an assortment of computer controlled opponents of varying skill levels across each of the game types. Other than a few minor variations on the rules (mainly dictating whether you 'Draw' additional tiles when you can't go or just pass) that's it. You take it in turns with up to three opponents, lining up numbered tiles with those already on the game board.

As for that main game, well, it's pure unadulterated dominoes. Little has changed with this latest iteration, possessing as it does the same polished presentation and likeably breezy approach to the main game. For those unfamiliar with the Cafe premise, it's an isometrically viewed cafe hub from which you can access a version of a classic game, view other players' high scores and compare personalised avatars ?C the latter two of which make use of your phone's online capabilities. The traditional game, played in sleepy pubs and on rainy family camping holidays since the year dot (pun intended). No, not those of the painstakingly-set-up-only-to-be-knocked-down variety, but the other ones.

#Dchoc cafe crossword series
DChoc Cafe Domino Nokia 6151 Juego de JavaDigital Chocolate's latest addition to its DChoc Cafe series of colourfully presented traditional games is dominoes.
