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reducing complaining in the entry


SequelDifficultySpike: ''Wedding Disaster'', the first entry in the series to remove the difficulty options, is ''much'' harder to three-star than the past games in the series. The scores required for the stars are higher than before, and customers lose patience incredibly quickly, so you need a near-perfect run of the level in order to have a chance at the third star. This is also the first entry in the series to have minigames, all of which seem to be designed with touchscreens in mind, making this task even more difficult on devices without touchscreens (such as [=PCs=]). Thankfully, ''True Colors'' makes the customers more patient and reduces the points required for the stars, making the task of three-starring the levels much easier.

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SequelDifficultySpike: ''Wedding Disaster'', Disaster'' is the first entry in the series to remove the difficulty options, is ''much'' harder and seems to three-star than make the past games in the series."hard" difficulty its default. The scores required for the stars are higher than before, and customers lose patience incredibly quickly, so you need a near-perfect run of the level in order to have a chance at the third star. This is also the first entry in the series to have minigames, all of which seem to be designed with touchscreens in mind, making this task even more difficult on devices without touchscreens (such as [=PCs=]). Thankfully, ''True Colors'' makes goes back to the "normal" difficulty, which means that the customers are more patient and reduces the points required for the stars, stars are reduced, making the task of three-starring the levels much easier.
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SequelDifficultySpike: ''Wedding Disaster'', the first entry in the series to remove the difficulty options, is ''much'' harder to three-star than the past games in the series. The scores required for the stars are higher than before, and customers lose patience incredibly quickly, so you need a near-perfect run of the level in order to have a chance at the third star. This is also the first entry in the series to have minigames, all of which seem to be designed with touchscreens in mind, making this task even more difficult on devices without touchscreens (such as [=PCs=]). Thankfully, ''True Colors'' makes the customers more patient and reduces the points required for the stars, making the task of three-starring the levels much easier.

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