Great Video Game Apps For Mac For Teens
Is a lightweight image editor that serves the basic needs of anyone who captures images mostly via smartphone. It’s not as powerful as Photoshop, or even Pixelmator, but it’s simple, approachable, and effective.
Sep 10, 2018 - First, it's an extremely light game that can run great on older Macs, including MacBooks. It's so popular it has its own League of Legends Friends mobile app just. Who don't need high-end graphics to enjoy a good gaming session. Various girls in the club, and there's a lot of dialogue to click through.
Unlike the semi-convoluted featuresets of bigger image editors, Polarr puts tools to adjust skin tone, whiten teeth, and make more standard edits — like brightness/contrast, saturation, exposure — at your fingertips. It’s got over 100 filters, many of which are far better than you could find at Instagram. Bear [Free] is everything we thought Mac’s native ‘Notes’ app would be by now. It’s a feature rich note-taking tool that has a lot of cool customization options, a robust style menu all hiding under a single icon, and the ability to drag and drop files right on to the interface. The addition of search triggers — type @task to find your todo lists, or @files to find all notes with attachments — makes for a more Evernote-like note-taking tool than the default option. It’s also free, and a much better looking alternative than Mac’s mostly underachieving alternative.
Multiple share options, programming support for over 20 languages, and hashtag sorting are just icing on the cake. It’s also available on the iPhone and iPad. XCOM 2 [$49.99] Aliens have descended on Earth and its your job to keep them at bay. This turn-based strategy game takes a top-down view of the action and provides an interesting perspective to the typical run-and-gun alien shooter. Once inside, you’ll build an army, research new technologies, and rack your brain over how to get out of some truly sticky situations without becoming food for Sci-Fi movie reject. Is some of the most fun I’ve had gaming on the Mac all year, and it’s definitely one of the best games of 2016.
Bartender 2 [$15] is a simple app that does exactly what it’s supposed to do: unclutter your menubar. When open, the app adds a tiny tuxedo icon to the menubar that, once clicked, adds a drop-down window to show the apps that were normally contained there. It’s customizable, light-weight, and far more appealing visually than looking at my out-of-control menubar. Dropzone 3 [$1.99] is sort of the Swiss Army Knife of moving files between folders, devices, or to the cloud. The drag-and-drop interface allows you to drop files, images, video, and more to social media (Twitter, Flickr, Facebook, or Messages), FTP or Amazon S3, Imgur, or AirDrop.
Or, maybe you don’t know what you want to do with it just yet, and in that case you can just leave it in Dropzone until you decide. The application is also infinitely customizable with a bit of programming knowledge (Ruby or Python). Pixelmator [$29.99] was my favorite app of last year, and one I highly recommended in a year-end post. This year, it’s only gotten better. It’s not Photoshop, so comparing it to the world’s foremost tool for pro photographers is doing it a great injustice.
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For the beginner to intermediate photo editor, though, there’s nothing better. It’s lightening-quick, and the tools all see far more approachable at a glance than more complex (and expensive) editors.
It’s got nearly everything you need and the price is certainly right. Mini Metro [$9.99] If minimalist strategy games are your thing, there were none better in 2016 than. The game sees you start with three transit stations you need to connect to make functioning subway lines. As the city grows, you’ll add more stations, more lines, and try to keep all of your cities citizens happy — a difficult task. 1Password [$64.99] 2016 was the year of password breaches. While we can’t avoid thieves making off with passwords, we can certainly limit the damage by not reusing them.
Stores all of your passwords, helps you create strong new ones, and even secures notes, credit card data, and software licenses behind strong encryption that syncs across devices. Spark [Free] I waxed poetic about when it first released on the Mac a few weeks ago, but I’m happy to recommend it again here. Spark, in my opinion, is the best email app on the Mac, and I’ve tried them all. What makes Spark so great is both in simplicity and power. The simplicity element has become a hallmark for all email apps on the Mac, and Spark’s minimal design follows suit nicely. In fact, most won’t be able to pick Spark, Airmail, or Polymail out of a lineup if they only had a quick glance in which to do it. Simple is only good when it’s effective, though, and Spark is certainly built to do the job.