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Website helps with Cut the Rope

By Sue R. Scott


Though its certainly not common knowledge, the first video game was not designed for a television screen, computer console, or smart phone. It was designed for a cathode ray device. In this primitive game, the player manipulated a cathode ray tube beam as he tried to shoot at simulated airplane targets. Though simple and line-drawn, this early video game had the distinction of being the first of its kind, one of many to follow in years to come.

Other primitive video games followed: draughts, a program written originally for the NPL Pilot ACE computer in 1951; a graphical tic-tac-toe game developed in 1952 for the EDSAC computer; a primitive tennis game in 1958; and eventually, the ubiquitous Pong, which made its way into homes in later years.

Sure, these early games were lacking in most of the elements now seen as basic and necessary by modern players, but they did represent a new force to be reckoned with, one that would slowly work its way into the human mindset and change the habits of a generation.

It didn't take long for video games to evolve, moving from platform to platform. Though first popular on home computer consoles and stand-alone units designed to be plugged into a television set, video games eventually paired with high-definition monitors to bring an all but lifelike gaming experience to modern players. In more recent years, game such as Cut the Rope. have migrated to the "small screen," by which we mean smart phones.

Devices such as Apple's iPhone and the more recent Android, give users a chance to play games such as Cut the Rope virtually anywhere. You can be waiting in line at the grocery store, sitting in traffic, or killing time before an dentist's appointment; there's nearly always a video game challenge waiting to keep tedium at bay.

Smart phone games have gained in popularity in recent years to the extent that there are now several websites available to help users make their way through the often difficult levels common in modern video games. Sites like Cut the Rope Walkthrough and Cut the Rope Experiments allow users to gather priceless tips on game play, thereby allowing them to reach recurrently higher levels of play in less time than might be reached by merely slogging through the game on their own.

Videos of actual game play are available, along with such things as text instructions. All this and more can be obtained free with the click of a mouse. Certainly, the video game business has come a long way since that first simple beep on a cathode ray tube.




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