Dana left New York to escape a roller-coaster relationship.
Vincent is living in Los Angeles, trying to forget his own
shattered marriage. They want to plan a future together-but
first they have to stop running from their pasts. Eric
Jerome Dickey, a rising star on the bestseller lists,
delivers a boldly honest novel-about love that starts with a
lie.
"Steamy romance, betrayal, and redemption.
Eric Jerome Dickey at his best." (USA Today)
"[Liar's Game] really has the power." (Kirkus
Reviews)
It's sad that the heap of a heap of slow, but moving characters is not very suitable for a portable platform with a small screen. Sometimes it becomes difficult to understand what is happening and in what corner of the map it is worth running. The map itself on the lower screen is also not very informative, as it is crammed with pointers and colored labels to the eye. Another chudit camera, periodically refusing to be guided where necessary and showing anything, just not the right opponent. Although if you manage to get rid of the total chaos in which you are wearing, and make, for example, a screenshot, it turns out that Legends looks very nice by the standards of the ancient "iron". (Anna May 11:05am May 20, 2018)
The battles from the original are kept in full volume, between the battles there were screensavers, though spoiled by "zamylivaniem" - over the transfer, in general, worked. But the owners of the old version of the console recommend to try the demo and assess whether 18 - 20 frames per second and sudden appearances of monsters under the nose are interfering. (Anna May 11:05am May 20, 2018)