AppRecs review analysis
AppRecs rating 4.7. Trustworthiness 71 out of 100. Review manipulation risk 27 out of 100. Based on a review sample analyzed.
★★★★☆
4.7
AppRecs Rating
Ratings breakdown
5 star
50%
4 star
50%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%
What to know
✓
Low review manipulation risk
27% review manipulation risk
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Credible reviews
71% trustworthiness score from analyzed reviews
✓
High user satisfaction
100% of sampled ratings are 4+ stars (4.7★ average)
About Creepy Redneck Dino Mansion 3
Creepy Redneck Dinosaur Mansion 3 is “committing to the bit” so hard it hurts.
• Sequel to a game series that doesn't exist.
• Deep lore. Super deep.
• Match-3 to debate robots.
• Make meaningful choices in a cool story.
• Match DNA bubbles in an underground lab to keep your psychic clone from invading your mind and turning you into a cannibal.
• Fictional development team.
• Fight super-science as a former postal inspector.
20 years ago, Creepy Redneck Dinosaur Mansion emerged as a smash-hit genre fusion, casting fan-favorite protagonist Jack Briar in a fast-paced puzzle adventure.
8 years ago, Creepy Redneck Dinosaur Mansion 3 was announced on the biggest stage in gaming.
This is what happened next.
WHAT IS THIS?
• A match-3 metroidvania —or matchroidvania—exploring the development of a sequel to a game series that doesn't exist.
• Another wild genre fusion from the developers behind Clickolding, I Am Your Beast, and Space Warlord Organ Trading Simulator.
• A story about sequels, game development, and the horrible, beautiful things that happen when the foundation of your reality falls apart.
• Part match-3 metroidvania, part choice-based narrative, part survival horror parody, part joyful wheel-spinning nightmare.
• A game that could only work with a polka soundtrack, provided by award-winning composer David Mason (Dredge, Life Eater).
• Committing to the bit.
Tap to Rate:
Reviews for Creepy Redneck Dino Mansion 3
abuelito
Nice surprise
Wasn’t expecting this game to come to mobile — glad I held off on the steam version since I’d rather play match 3s on iOS. Fun take on the meta narrative, and I’ll really digging the simplified PuzzleQuest gameplay.
aloe alfedii
A bit buggy
The concept is really fun, but the gameplay is a bit frustrating. There’s no way to exit a branch you’re on, so if you make a decision that lands you on a fight you’ve already won, you have to either play it through again or close and reopen the game. The biggest issue I found is a bug where if an item is used up, all your attacks disappear from the menu, typically meaning you automatically lose.