Geometry Dash: SubZero is the latest game in the long-running, insanely difficult endless runner series for the iOS and Android platforms. This one features the same wide range of geometric shape characters as the other games, along with a practice mode, free gifts, free levels, and levels that you can pay for. You can even get bonus levels and do your own level creation. Read on for some tips and tricks for Geometry Dash: SubZero!
This game is the hardest one in the series, and when we say it’s the hardest, we mean it’s the hardest BY FAR. So if you have not yet done so, then go back and play the older Geometry Dash games before you play this one. They aren’t too hard, but they will introduce you to the challenges of the series, which you will still see plenty of in SubZero, so you’ll be ready to deal with some challenges, and can focus on learning the new challenges later when you get to this one.
Another way to get good at the game quickly is by using the practice mode so that you can see all of the obstacles on a stage. The difference between practice and non-practice mode is that in practice mode, you make a checkpoint every time that you land. So if you crash, you’ll be able to start from the last place that you landed a jump. If you get stuck in an endless loop of death, though, you can hit the “no checkpoint” button on the right side of the screen to delete the last checkpoint and start from the one before it.
If you want a bit of a break before restarting again, then go to the options menu and turn off auto-retry. If you want to manually place all of your checkpoints in practice mode, shut off auto-checkpoints. You can use high-capacity mode on speedier phones to increase performance. Load songs to memory and load time will increase, but performance will improve. Experiment with the other options to find a balance and get the best possible performance out of the game.
There’s even more options available than that in the options menu, including options that have to do with the pay version of the game. There’s about five different pages full of options, many of which go to the developer levels of depth, and some which don’t even do anything, they’re just there for the hell of it. The “Just Don’t” option flips the “Attempt 1/2/3/etc” text upside down at the beginning of the level.
Upgrade to the full version of the game to unlock a whole host of new goodies. The chief attraction is the ability to not only build your own levels, but to play custom levels that other players create. There is even a comment and rating system, so that you can solicit both from other players for your levels, and try to compete for the best ratings possible from other players.