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Drop claw game
Drop claw game










drop claw game
  1. Drop claw game full#
  2. Drop claw game free#

Usually it rolls around a bit more, but this turn it just went straight through the 3 white holes. The ball has to go through the white hole in each 3 levels to win. Another pure random game, took several shots to win. Don’t really know what I did right! Lucky bounce I think. I haven’t seen this game since I played this, and I won it in 2 shots. Keep an eye out for how the plastic clear ring is around the hole pan, if there’s a gap the balls can fall through and it’s a lot harder to win. Have a look at how many balls were in this one though, huge amount of shots before it won (not all me!). Probably my favorite game – completely random and always a chance of winning each time. Doesn’t really matter how many times you play, it doesn’t seem to improve your chances. Fairly luck driven, pick a spot to try and grab as many plastic rings as you can and hope they land on one of the cones. This particular shot I’ve only ever had happen once, where I knocked a ball I didn’t even pick up into the white hole, it still counts.

Drop claw game free#

Good for a free shot as you have a chance of getting it in one turn. Really random, and often none of the balls at all will drop in a hole. I got a thumbs up at the end so had to contact support to get some free bonus credits :) This one grabs a bunch of ping pong balls and drops them – if one stops in the white hole, you win. This one is more strategy and takes several turns, but you’ll be able to get your prize if you know what you’re doing. Once you get it far enough to the right, then you can use the arm to push it down. This one requires you to roll the ball with the crane arms from the left side to the right side, as the poles it’s resting on become wider.

Drop claw game full#

This isn’t the full set of games they have either, there’s even more I keep discovering. I’ve used a video for each type of game they have and I’ll explain it and give some tips.

drop claw game

They also actually assist you to win I was stuck a few times and they’d reposition a box, refill up pingpong balls or do something to get you there. They have constant promotions of giving away free turns and points, promotions that when you win something someone might give you a thumbs up – you have to link them your thumbs up video and just get bonus points for spotting it. The things I liked about Cremas were that overall it seemed like they were trying hard to make this work and give people a good experience. Chocco pies were tasty, as were the cream collon snacks I had to win purely based on name. Some of the notable things so far a Chain Chomp from Mario, a weird bath fishing set, and snacks that are half science experiment – dissolving powder into liquids, then combining and creating weird jelly balls. That makes each turn on a 77 credit game cost ~$1.30AU and a 250 credit game cost ~$4.50.Ī few weeks of playing and getting some prizes, I requested shipping and had two boxes turn up full of interesting goodies:

drop claw game

A single game can cost anywhere from 77 to 777 (rare) with most games in the 100-250 range. To give an idea on the cost – if you load up 5000 yen (about $75AU) (the minimum to get a free delivery) each point costs a bit under 2 cents Australian. The price to play isn’t cheap, but as long as you load up enough money, delivery is free for whatever you win once a week. The lure of winning a bunch of Japanese items toys, food and gadgets is strong. There’s a bunch of different games and different methods of winning – some are skills based requiring several turns to win, others are much more random – but I gradually got better at working out what I could win and when. Maybe that’ll be released here soon.īack on Cremas – although there’s a bit of broken English and the occasional Japanese writing instead of English, overall it’s pretty good and makes enough sense to work out what’s going on.Īfter deciding I actually liked this one, I spent a fair bit of time working out how it all functioned. I did want to try Sega’s version of this which has launched in the U.S., but isn’t out in Australia yet. I searched the Google Play store and tried a few others I could find, but didn’t really like any of them – until I found Crane Master/Claw Machine Master by a company called Cremas (links for Google Play and iOS app). Toreba itself wasn’t much different, but it seemed reasonably difficult to win at. I wondered if there were other crane games around, or if Toreba had changed. I hadn’t really done it since, up until isolation was thrust upon us. A few years back, I got into online crane games from a company called Toreba, and of course blogged about it (that wasn’t a sponsored post, and nor is this – I’ve received nothing from them beyond any other player would have).












Drop claw game