Popular Games: Gold Miner  **  Slot Machine  **  Jewel Match  **  Sudoku  **  Defender  **  2048  **  Angry Finches  **  Tic-Tac_Toe  **  Maze Ball  **  Ancient Blocks  **  GoMoKu  **  American 2048  **  Shoot Plastic Bottles  **  Pacman  **  Dead City Shooting Game  **  2048-American-Style  **  Classical Breakout  **  Zombie Shooter  *  Battleship  **  Plumber Game  **  Angry Aliens  **  Pinball  **  Freecell  **  Frog Jumper  **  Asteroids Classical  **  Tesla Car Race  **  Tetris  **  The Sorcerer  **  Space Invaders  **  Chess  **  Connect 4  **  Backgammon  **  Tower Transformer  **  Domino  **  Trouble Bubble 3  **  Soap Ball Canon  **  Bubble Shooter  **  Towers of Hanoi  **  Candy Game  **  Angry Fish  **  Asteroids - Modren  **  3D Maze  **  Checkers  **  Breakout  ** 


More Free Games: Dead City Shooting Game  **  2048-American-Style  **  Classical Breakout  **  Zombie Shooter  *  Battleship  **  Plumber Game  **  Angry Aliens  **  Pinball  **  Freecell  **  Gold Miner  **  Slot Machine  **  Jewel Match  **  Sudoku  **  Frog Jumper  **  Asteroids Classical  **  Tesla Car Race  **  Tetris  **  The Sorcerer  **  Space Invaders  **  Chess  **  Connect 4  **  Backgammon  **  Tower Transformer  **  Domino  **  Trouble Bubble 3  **  Soap Ball Canon  **  Bubble Shooter  **  Towers of Hanoi  **  Candy Game  **  Angry Fish  **  Asteroids - Modren  **  3D Maze  **  Checkers  **  Breakout  **  Defender  **  2048  **  Angry Finches  **  Tic-Tac_Toe  **  Maze Ball  **  Ancient Blocks  **  GoMoKu  **  American 2048  **  Shoot Plastic Bottles  **  Pacman  ** 


Transformers

Transformers (Japanese: トランスフォーマー Hepburn: Toransufōmā) is a media franchise produced by American toy company Hasbro and Japanese toy company Takara Tomy. Initially a line of transforming mecha toys rebranded from Takara's Diaclone and Microman toylines, the franchise began in 1984 with the Transformers toy line, and centers on factions of self-configuring modular extraterrestrial robotic lifeforms (often the Autobots and the Decepticons) in an endless civil war for dominance or eventual peace. In its history, the Transformers robot superhero franchise has expanded to encompass comic books, animation, video games and films.
The term "Generation 1" covers both the animated television series The Transformers and the comic book series of the same name, which are further divided into Japanese and British spin-offs, respectively. Sequels followed, such as the Generation 2 comic book and Beast Wars TV series, which became its own mini-universe. Generation 1 characters underwent two reboots with Dreamwave in 2001 and IDW Publishing in 2005, also as a remastered series. There have been other incarnations of the story based on different toy lines during and after the 20th century. The first was the Robots in Disguise series, followed by three shows (Armada, Energon, and Cybertron) that constitute a single universe called the "Unicron Trilogy". A live-action film was also released in 2007, with a sequel in 2009, a second sequel in 2011, a third in 2014, and a fourth in 2017, again distinct from previous incarnations, while the Transformers: Animated series merged concepts from the G1 story-arc, the 2007 live-action film and the "Unicron Trilogy". Transformers: Prime previously aired on The Hub.
Although initially a separate and competing franchise started in 1983, Tonka's Gobots became the intellectual property of Hasbro after their buyout of Tonka in 1991. Subsequently, the universe depicted in the animated series Challenge of the GoBots and follow-up film GoBots: Battle of the Rock Lords was retroactively established as an alternate universe within the Transformers robot superhero franchise.

Tower Defence Game

Tower defense (TD) is a subgenre of strategy video game where the goal is to defend a player's territories or possessions by obstructing the enemy attackers, usually achieved by placing defensive structures on or along their path of attack. This typically means building a variety of different structures that serve to automatically block, impede, attack or destroy enemies. Tower defense is seen as a subgenre of real-time strategy video games, due to its real-time origins, though many modern tower defense games include aspects of turn-based strategy. Strategic choice and positioning of defensive elements is an essential strategy of the genre.
Ryan Clements of IGN attributes the popularity of such games to psychology and human vulnerability. Tower defense, according to Clements, "plays off of our need for security, ownership, and a desire to protect the people closest to us" arising from a need to create intrinsic value through "ownership over things", "personal space" and to "repel our fears and insecurities".