TapMe.plus is the kind of game where a small rule change can matter.
Rush Mode timing, leaderboard resets, ongoing runs, personal records, and even the way a mode name reads can all affect how players understand the score chase. That is why community notes are useful. They give the game a public place to explain what changed and why.
What good feedback looks like
Useful feedback is usually specific:
- which mode were you playing;
- what score or chain felt unusual;
- whether the issue happened on web, iPhone, or iPad;
- whether it affected an ongoing game or a new run;
- what you expected the board to do.
That kind of detail helps separate a real bug from a confusing but valid board state.
Records and mode history
Players care about records. If a Rush rule changes or a leaderboard is reset, it should be explained plainly. Older records can still be part of the game’s history, but current leaderboards should be clear about the rules they represent.
That is especially important for a puzzle built around high scores. A good record should feel earned and understandable.
A better game over time
TapMe.plus is simple on purpose, but simple games still need tuning. Community feedback helps decide what should stay calm, what should get faster, and what needs clearer wording.
The board is the center of the game. The conversation around it helps keep that board fair.