Fantastic
A very useful travel companion for any Roman history nerd!
Ja, TimeTravelRome ist kostenlos herunterzuladen, enthält jedoch In-App-Käufe oder Abonnements.
✅ Die TimeTravelRome-App scheint von hoher Qualität und legitim zu sein. Die Nutzer sind sehr zufrieden.
TimeTravelRome bietet mehrere In-App-Käufe/Abonnements, der durchschnittliche In-App-Preis beträgt £3.99.
Um geschätzte Einnahmen der TimeTravelRome-App und weitere AppStore-Einblicke zu erhalten, können Sie sich bei der AppTail Mobile Analytics Platform anmelden.
5 von 5
6 Bewertungen in Vereinigtes Königreich
A very useful travel companion for any Roman history nerd!
If only I knew about this app years ago! Incredible creation. Wish they had one for other eras of history!
Amazing app! That’s all! 😊👌🏻
Everything works spot on! But I can’t fine where to buy the pro version for the life of me.
I’m using an x max iphone. A beautiful app and all but after less than a minute of use it crashed. I strongly advise you guys to polish this app and make it uncrashable before all COVID restrictions are left off and everyone gets to travel freely again.
This app is great in almost all the same ways ToposText is. This focuses more on the Roman aspects. Quick and easy primary sources at your fingertips without wasting hours of rummaging on the internet.
What a great app! I wish all were this good!!
Ive used the app to plan numerous trips, visiting Roman ruins and museums of all sizes. It is an invaluable tool, showing one by stars how recommended the place is and giving a good overview of towns and ruins so you know what to expect. Before downloading the app, I overlooked plenty of interesting places on my travels but not any more!
This app is a basic digital map, very similar to the Harvard University digital atlas of Roman and Medieval Civilizations (which is free online), but unfortunately it only offers brief wiki’ish descriptions, and a link to the actual wikipedia page, but not a single photo. That’s a real let down. On the upside, if a site is mentioned in an ancient text, there is a link to that text, with the mentioning blurb excised under the source title, which is very a welcome plus. But, if you then proceed to open that text in full (another great option), you have to read through the entire text to find the above mentioned blurb. This should seemingly be highlighted for obvious reasons, but instead you are faced with random underlined names, etc that link you to other semi-relevant location pages. Overall - Definitely needs some streamlining - and no photos is a real bummer. Not yet worth $6.99.
I like the idea; realisation is nice too.