The tower defence genre is a bit of a 'cursed treasure' for any developer.It looks so tantalisingly shiny. The genre works a treat on touchscreen devices, and what's more there seems to be an insatiable appetite among gamers for more of it.And yet, draw closer to this attractive stash, and you'll find an immortal champion ready to hack down anyone who tries to steal the jewelled tower defence crown.I'm talking about. Property at a premiumCursed Treasure 2 developer IRN Soft's tactics involve mimicking the jaunty fantasy look and basic feel of Kingdom Rush, but then teaching it a variety of fresh moves.It mostly works, too. What initially appears to be a needlessly limiting experience soon opens out into something quite interesting. Not as good as Ironhide's masterpiece, but certainly a worthwhile accompaniment.The simple act of building a tower in Cursed Treasure 2 is a lot more constrained than in other tower defence games. For one thing, you can only build each of the three core tower types on territory of the corresponding colour.What's more, you'll often have to spend your limited resources to cultivate the land for such placement.
Painting the town redSpeaking of resources, there are a number of things other than your towers that demand investment. Towns and castles send out supporting heroes to help launch a raid on your stash of five gems, but you can spend mana to gradually lessen their impact, and ultimately take them over and nullify them altogether.You can also invest in gold and mana mines to slowly increase your income of both. All in all, it's an interesting economy that makes you think long and hard about your overall strategy as much as the moment-to-moment action.Another of Cursed Treasure 2's systems that initially feels limiting is the upgrade system. You can't improve your towers until they've gained the appropriate experience through use, which means it's possible to effectively starve your towers of XP fuel with an overly effective forward guard. Counter attackAll of this added complexity and variation is a double-edged sword.
It makes Cursed Treasure 2 a lot more interesting than most Kingdom Rush wannabes, but it also makes it less intuitive and tougher to warm to. It just doesn't quite flow as well as we'd like.You don't get the same instinctive understanding of the interplay between the three tower types as you do in the Kingdom Rush games. Even a number of hours in, I still find myself going back to the tower description to see what each stage of a tower's development does.Combined with the restrictive territory system, I found myself developing the same kind of even, varied defence across successive levels, without quite the level of tactical fluidity I would have liked.But really, Cursed Treasure 2's developer deserves credit for taking a distinctive approach to a well established genre. It innovates in enough areas to be worth a look even if there are better, more fluid tower defence games out there.It's not going to be stealing the tower defence crown, then, but Cursed Treasure 2 has managed to find a sneaky little niche in which to survive.
The Best Way to Deal With Ninjas. Ninjas become invisible after they are first hit. To beat these stealthy enemies build towers near map entrances, and others near your gems. Ninjas will go invisible early, but then the invisibility will wear off so your second line of defense will tear them apart!7. The Best Way to Deal with Flying Enemies. Flying enemies appear very suddenly and take shortcuts that bypass your towers. Watch the next attack bar carefully, and build defenses on alternate routes in advance.8.
Pay Close Attention to the Special Skills of Your Enemies. Pay attention to enemy special abilities. For example, the Paladins and Templars can’t be frightened, so it’s useless to cast the ‘Terror’ spell on them.9. The Terror Spell Can Also Work Well in Defending Your Buildings. You can cast the ‘Terror’ spell on your towers to clear negative effects off them (for example, the Templar’s ‘Consecration’ debuff).10. Take Down Buildings That Tend to Produce Additional Baddies; These Extra Tips Will Also Aid You in Battle. When you capture buildings that generate additional enemies, you are not only decreasing the number of attackers but gaining some gold coins.
So powerful is the ninja, in fact, that you can essentially divide all enemies in Cursed Treasure into categories: ninja and non-ninja. Non-ninja enemies can be ignored when building your defences. Ninjas cannot. There are two ways to kill a ninja: Destroy him before he has a chance to use his smoke bomb. Simple guide explaining skulls, skills, game progress and hard missions at the end of game. Cursed Treasure 2 is one of the classical TD games. I hope you are enjoying it and this guide will help you. Disclaimer: I'm not author of the video walkthroughs. Original authors are: Wyvern Studios, Taior3 Studios, ptiger123, 폰게임.
Try to build towers close to roads. The longer the part of the road is in the tower’s range, the more effective the tower is. The pulsing arrow indicates that a tower is ready to be upgraded.
Try to upgrade towers quickly as you gather enough money. The arrow indicator will turn green if you have enough!. If you get into a difficult situation, don’t get upset. Use powerful Grand Spells to destroy all the enemies on the map, or even to return stolen gems back to your cave. Look at the badges and complete some tasks. Some badges give you XP as rewards.