When you pull out the first point of a curve, it's oriented backwards. Here's what I see when I click on the left point of the circle, drag the curve handle upwards, release, and move the cursor to the second point: http://imgur.com/zw20Ig4
The Silver app lets you play 2-player games of Silver (the card game from Bezier Games, Inc.) against a computer AI. Learn the ins and outs of the game, and practice before taking on your friends! Your goal in Silver is simple: have the lowest sum by the end of four rounds. To accomplish this, use. This page contains Cheats for Bezier organized by sections for PC. This game has 'Action Shooter Third-Person' as genre, made by Niine Games. If you can't find a hint or secret in our list, then please check this page periodically for the latest updates.
I get the same behavior on the next exercise (the heart), as well.
Also I feel that you are giving exactly enough points to do a nicely editable shape, and then asking them to do it in less by having the score mechanic. I'm at the face now, and every preceding image has been done with exactly the amount of points allocated when I follow my usual rules of point placement. I feel like you're teaching people to make hard-to-edit images by asking them to use less points.
(Said rules:1. Pull curve handles out to about 1/3 of the length of the line they control.2. Never turn more than 90º between two control points.3. Avoid S-curves between two points.)
OSX 10.9.4, Safari. And fourteen years using Illustrator as my main artistic medium.
Edit. I stopped at the swooshy S when you asked me to try and make it with about 3/4 as many points as I would consider to be the minimum for a nice, controllable path. I feel you are teaching people bad form.

(To make a programming analogy: think of the difference between ultra-compact, hyper-idiomatic Perl code with single-letter variables and nicely-commented code with informative variable names - the Perl may be smaller, but it takes a lot more effort to go back and read when you need to change something.)
By GamesRadar Staff
of GamesRadar | The best board games 2020
The Bezier Game Download
Where do you begin when it comes to the best board games? They're more popular now than ever, and that means we have no shortage of choice. If you're just starting out in the world of tabletop games, 'overwhelming' is an understatement.
That's where we come in. The GamesRadar+ team has spent years playing every game we could lay our hands on, so we've got plenty of suggestions to get you started. Regardless of whether you're hunting down strategy epics, something for a party, or quieter alternatives you can play as a couple, you'll find it here in our list of the best board games.