The Humble Bundle has always been a spectacular deal whenever one appears. It's back yet again, and what has me really excited is that this time, they'll throw in a couple of my personal favorites, Aquaria and Crayon Physics Deluxe, if you exceed the average price paid (currently 3.78).
For those few who might not be aware, the Humble Bundle packages are limited-time game bundles, usually of high quality independent titles, that are sold at a personalized price. Basically, you look at the games on offer, decide what they're worth to you, and pay whatever you like for the entire set. Lately, they've also started throwing in a few extra titles if you pay more than the average price. The games are all DRM-free, and you can even choose how you want them to distribute the money you use for your purchase between the developers, the Humble Bundle team, the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the Child's Play charity organization. You have roughly twelve days to jump on this one, so don't wait too long. Four or five bucks is a steal for any of these awesome games, let alone all six.
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Shantae: Risky's Revenge
If you're a fan, as I am, of open-world side scrolling platformers like many of those in the Castlevania and Metroid series', you might want to take a look at Shantae: Risky's Revenge. Since I don't own a DS, its released slipped by me in October of last year, but I recently discovered the iOS port while poking around the app store and have been having a blast.
Shantae is an adventurous half genie with a distinctly nineties attitude and a tendency to solve her problems by embarking on epic journeys. Her friends include a sexy falconer, a stern-faced sparring partner, an eccentric treasure-hunting uncle, and a zombie girlfriend who keeps trying to convince her that puppies are delicious.
Risky Boots is a pirate in the fine tradition of Saturday morning cartoon villains whose list of misdeeds includes stealing stuff in big, conspicuous heists in front of lots of people, saying mean things, and employing a gang of faceless, bumbling minions whose primary function seems to be serving as targets for her insults.
These two conduct their capers in a colorful cartoon world full of floating platforms, quirky bad guys, helpful townies and ancient temples that, for all that they're ostensibly forbidden, seem to have been built for the sole purpose of being a blast to explore. Shantae is as agile and fun to control as any of the best platform mascots from the SNES or Genesis. She can run, jump, climb, duck, crawl, swim and even dance backward to avoid sudden attacks. Her primary weapon is her huge ponytail, which she uses as a whip, but she can also learn to fling fireballs, summon storm clouds, wield a morning star, and perform magical dances that will turn her into a monkey, elephant, or mermaid. This all comes spread with a thick layer of 16 bit flavor in everything from the character design to the art style to the sound effects and music. In a fun little twist, it utilizes parallax scrolling in game play. Layers that look like background scenery are actually separate play fields that Shantae can move to at specific points around the map. Can't figure out how to jump over that huge chasm? Maybe you don't have to. Hop into the background layer and see if you can find a way around it.
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