![]() ![]() Despite the game being broken up into individual stages, the game is also broken up into chapters so that you are often working toward a single goal or following a small storyline (or a bigger one, towards the end of the game). It’s all done in gloriously smooth animation and beautiful hand-crafted art. In another you’ll be helping the villagers overthrow the bullying town sheriff. In one stage you’ll be setting free an oppressed little piggy. You play as a kid thief who-along with his pet ferret-make it through each stage by sneaking past guards and snatching things along the way. ![]() ![]() Tiny Thief doesn’t reinvent the wheel, but when your game has the charm and personality of a Pixar film, it hardly matters. But you really shouldn’t-you’d be passing up not only one of the cutest iOS games of the year, but also a thoroughly entertaining point-and-click adventure game. Add in the fact that every other game in the App Store today uses Rovio’s tired three-star stage completion format and you might pass over Tiny Thief without blinking an eye. Playing as a thief isn’t exactly a novel concept-especially when you look at the amount of games that involve sneaking around that have come out in just the past year or two. ![]()
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