Visually, Brew Town
is rendered in beautiful 3D with a modern retro aesthetic. In some ways, it
reminds me of Horizon Chase, probably because of the low-poly design. Despite
that, Brew Town is still fairly detailed when it
comes to the architecture of each building in your brewery, and the world is
bright and vivid. As your brewery comes to life one-by-one, tiny little people
will populate the area and drive through, so it’s fun to watch it all come
together. Animations are smooth and fluid for the most part — I did experience
some slow frame rates when I had a lot going on and was furiously tapping away
being efficient. There isn’t much going on for the soundtrack, but Brew Town
has the realistic sounds of sports games, bars, cars passing by, and glass
bottles clinking together.
As you design your own
brews, you can customize the bottles with a variety of stickers and decals.
There’s a lot to choose from, and each sticker acts as its own layer. Each one
can be colored, resized, or even rotated to create your perfect label. Bottle
colors and caps can also be personalized with your choice of color, so every
brew is special.
The process for your
brewery is simple, and the game does have a tutorial that explains the basics
when you start. Essentially, you’ll have the hops farm, and when hops are ready
to be harvested, just tap on them to collect. You can only hold so many hops at
a time before it’s full, so keep an eye out on your stock.
The next step is to
start brewing. In the beginning of the game, you get a lager, and more brew
types are available. However, to get access to other types, you must do
research and create or improve a formula to earn a certain amount of profits
before they open up. The more you research a formula to improve, the more expensive
it becomes to research. With research, you choose a new flavor to add to the
formula, then play a little mini-game where you must stop the dial in the
designated green areas (or at least close to the marker) to ensure good
quality.
The brewing is done with
timers. The more profitable a beer is, the more time it takes to brew. You
start the game with 50 litre brewhouses, but you can upgrade them to increase
their capacity. When it’s done brewing, you send it off to the bottling plant
to go into your custom designed or default bottles. Just tap to bottle — it
starts with one bottle per tap, but you can increase it through upgrades.
Eventually, you’ll also discover the tap-and-hold bottling method, which is
another costly upgrade, but you can just long-press once to bottle.
All bottled brews are
stored in the warehouse, which you can also upgrade to hold more. You can stock
the bar, also upgradeable, to sell a certain number of bottles per minute for
profits. Your HQ gets order requests from other businesses, and serves as a
decent enough cash generator once you fulfill them. Once your brewery has
delivered a certain number of bottles, you can upgrade your HQ.
As you play, you’ll
also notice some drones flying around — tap on these for quick cash. There are
also pink limos and vans driving around that can get you bottle caps with a tap
or some cash if you watch an ad.
Every now and then,
you’ll get large requests for sporting events. These orders are special and you
only have a certain amount of time to fill the order, but the payoff is worth
it, especially if you’re in the more valuable hops territory. When these events
happen, you’ll want to make sure all of your brewhouses are brewing the
specified brews for the order, and you may want to sell off unwanted brews in
warehouse fire sales to make room.
All of the buildings
you can build and use in Brew
Town can be upgraded.
However, they get extremely costly, and that’s why it’s annoying when you move
up to a better hops since it all resets. However, you do at least keep your
brew formulas, thankfully.
Your farm generates a
few hops at a time, but the best way to get more is to play the mini-game,
Hop-or-Not. This is like a Tinder for other brew labels that people have
designed, and you can rate them with a “Yes” or “No” by swiping or tapping the
buttons. While you can be critical, I find it’s better to just give everyone a
like so you can quickly accrue more hops, as a few get awarded after every five
likes.
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