The game has a very fatal flaw. Random bonuses. Most milestone bonuses cough up a 2.5 of 5 percent bonus to speed or payout. But there's a chance of an epic bonus giving 75% bonus, making all the lesser tokens basically useless filler material. The problem is that there is a limited amount of bonus tokens, based on progress. Even an hour in, it feels like progress is designed to hit a wall if you don't get lucky and snag enough epic and legendary bonuses. But there's always the cash shop, offering speed and production boosts which double in cost with every purchase, and packs of boosters with no indication of a pity system which grants a certain number of high-rarity boosters. If you want to play for free: expect to hit walls whenever dumb luck doesn't favor you. If you don't mind spending a whole bunch of money on a free to play clicker game: throw this lootbox nightmare in the trash where it belongs, and go play a good clicker game instead and buy the developer of that game a cup of coffee.
Future Fortune
by Unknown
What players are saying
Everythimg is cool until you hit rebirth. Rebirth is 4th tier reset (prestige > inovation > ascension > rebirth) and it reset automation perk bought with ascension point. Sudddenly you need to babysit game again unless you bought permanent automation from cash shop. Yes they give "free gold in spin" but this just add one more option for gold in reward wheel. I've spin several time, mostly got multiplier boost for certain time limit. TLDR = idle game telling player to rebuy things that let them play game idly is dumb.
This is a straight clone of 'AdVenture Communist', but I think AdVenture Communist did it better. The so-called 'game-play' goes something like this: This thing adds that thing, that thing adds the other thing, and the other thing adds the thing that adds the points you need to add more things. I'm not sure if this really counts as a "game". You don't[i] play it [/i] so much as you turn it on, and watch it go. This "game" is 100% just a minimalistic vehicle for a cash-shop.
Reviews are by Steam users, hosted on Steam.