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I installed Fluid Simulation on my moto g7 from the Google Play Store and it’s just as gorgeous and fun there with multi-touch. If two fingers look so cool, how about 3? 5? 10! Technically you can do multi-touch on iPhone, but it may not occur to you straight away and once you get past a couple you can’t see the colors for all the fingers in the way.īut wait, Allison, I’m on Android! What about me? I want to play! Good news – Pavel loves you too.
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As soon as you’re on this bigger surface, it will occur to you to add a second finger. If you put Fluid on an iPad, it feels even more like painting with liquid light because of the giant surface. If you do it just right you can get the different colors to bang into each other like little mushroom clouds of color. Each stroke lingers, so adding strokes adds this beautiful cacophony of light together. Wait, if I touch it and get light, what if I move my finger around? Suddenly you’re painting with glorious light that moves like, well, a fluid simulation! Your first touch might be shades of yellow, the second pink, the third turquoise. You will be rewarded with a glorious burst of colored light where you touched, which will fade in a moment. For a moment you’ll be baffled, but the only logical thing to do is touch the screen. When you launch the app, all you’ll see is a black background with a hollow, white circle in the upper left. The app is called Fluid Simulation by Pavel Dobryakov for iOS. I’ve found something that’s not a game but it’s also not productive in any way. But I think the time has come to review something frivolous and only for entertainment. Lately I’ve been posting a lot of very deep technical articles, and reviews of very useful applications and products.