Neha Patil (Editor)

Crawl (video game)

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Developer(s)
  
Powerhoof

Distributor(s)
  
Steam

Initial release date
  
6 August 2014

10/10
Steam

Publisher(s)
  
Powerhoof

Engine
  
Unity

Genres
  
Roguelike, Beat 'em up

Crawl (video game) mediamoddbcomimagesgames12524685autoCrawl

Release date(s)
  
WW: August 6, 2014 (2014-08-06) (Early access)

Platforms
  
Microsoft Windows, Linux, PlayStation 4, Macintosh operating systems

Modes
  
Single-player video game, Multiplayer video game

Similar
  
Roguelike games, Other games

Crawl is a roguelike, brawler indie video game by Australian developer Powerhoof. Up to four players and bots in local multiplayer advance through randomly generated dungeons with one player as the hero and the others as ghosts who possess traps and monsters in the environment to kill and thus replace the hero. The game was released through Steam Early Access for Microsoft Windows, OS X, and Linux platforms on August 6, 2014.

Contents

Crawl (video game) Crawl video game Wikipedia

Gameplay

Crawl (video game) Crawl on Steam

Crawl is a cross-genre game with roguelike, bullet hell, and brawler elements for up to four offline players and bots. The main player advances through randomly generated dungeons as a human hero while up to three other ghost players control the dungeon's enemies and traps to kill the main player. The ghost player who kills the human hero swaps roles to become the next main player. Players earn experience as they progress through the dungeon in both the human hero and the non-human ghost roles. Hero experience unlocks new attacks and spells, and ghost experience unlocks stronger enemies to possess. Each player's human hero experience level, weapon, and stats progress is preserved between turns. Crawl was designed to be more fast-paced and arcade-like than strategic, and includes genre-standard activities like collecting loot and upgradable weapons and magic items. Once player ghosts possess "monster spawners" and traps in the active room, they cannot leave the form until they die or kill the main character. The players and enemies grow progressively more powerful over the course of a match. The game ends when a human hero reaches experience level 10, enters a portal, and defeats a final boss whose eye and tentacles are controlled cooperatively by the other players. Typical matches last about 30 minutes.

Development

Crawl was developed by Powerhoof, a two-person indie studio based in Melbourne. They described the game as their version of four-player Gauntlet combined with the Japanese bullet hell genre, or a combination of Super Bomberman and The Legend of Zelda. The game was made on the Unity game engine, and the developers designed a pixelated version of Gabe Newell as an in-game boss.

Crawl (video game) Crawl on Steam

The game was "greenlit" on Steam in a day's time. There is no online multiplayer, though the developers are considering it. They also plan to bring the game to the Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and Wii U consoles once they receive Unity support. The game was expected for release on Steam Early Access in July 2014, but was delayed due to an issue pertaining to Powerhoof's taxes and formation as a company. The game was released on Steam Early Access on August 6, 2014 for Microsoft Windows, OS X, and Linux platforms.

Reception

Crawl (video game) Crawl GameSpot

Critics placed Crawl in a trend of local multiplayer functionality amongst indie games. Pete Davison of USgamer wrote that the game bridged multiple genres and was an example of the resurgence of couch co-op's fashionability. Rock, Paper, Shotgun's Nathan Grayson compared the game's premise with Dungeonland. Hardcore Gamer's Marcus Estrada called the game's concept "ingenious" and praised its capacity as a party game. In reviewing a prerelease version, Estrada wrote that the game had issues with gameplay pacing, lackluster artificial intelligence, and opportunities for players to hold up the game.

The game sold over 10,000 copies in its first 12 days on sale on early access.

References

Crawl (video game) Wikipedia