
Touch Arcade:
Likely the most recognizable game out of the Physics Gamebox is going to be Ragdoll Cannon, which actually has been a free Flash game quite a long time before Backflip Studios' Ragdoll Blaster [$1.99] landed on the App Store. Gameplay is practically identical, right down to the art style. In Ragdoll Cannon, you touch the screen to launch ragdolls to hit a box marked "HERE". Just like Ragdoll Blaster, you can either play Ragdoll Cannon valuing accuracy and precision and attempt to clear levels in as few ragdolls as possible, or you can just go to town spamming ragdolls to your heart's content until one of them manages to run in to the target.

TheAppera: FDG Entertainment’s version of the game while still fun, is actually just half of this game’s package. There’s two games in PHYSICS GAMEBOX that should keep all puzzle fans on the edge of their seats.

Physics Gamebox is a game style that you’ve seen before in Ragdoll Blaster. There are two games in one giving you Roly-Poly Cannon and Ragdoll Cannon. In Roly-Poly you’re goal is to fire bombs to blow up the evil roly polys while in Ragdoll Cannon you simply try to blast the ragdoll to the goal indicated by a here box.

148Apps: "It’s not often that you are presented with a game that is made up of two games with a combined 300 levels. Although I had never played these games before, I hear that they are quite successful on bubblebox.com, (of which I had never been too… but it does have the net version of our recently reviewed game, Doodle God, though) which usually spells ok things for a game. If it’s successful on one platform, at least I’m guaranteed that a good number of people like the game."