The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics". This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously. In others, it’s only average.Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. In a couple of the worlds, it’s full of pulsating, blood-pumping tunes. The soundtrack quality varies from world to world. I didn’t notice any frame rate issues, which is important, as even the slightest bit of lag would often result in death. Each world has a distinct style, so the environments never get too boring. Every one of the trucks in the game looks the exact same. The lighting is nice, but that’s pretty much the best thing I can say about how this game looks. Visually, the game isn’t anything special. It really depends on how good you are at the game. I like to think that my time is at least average, but it’s definitely possible that average time could be much less. Others will easily blast through many of the levels I found difficult. Some will struggle with most levels, dying constantly. I myself took four hours to finish the campaign, but individual playtime will differ wildly from player to player. You can create a custom level made up from the many objects used throughout the campaign, then upload it to the Workshop and make it available for others to download and enjoy. Most of the replayability, though, comes from the custom map editor. Plenty of replayability is on offer here, some offered by the ability to play against the ghost of your friends in an attempt to beat their best times. It may not seem like much, but it can seriously affect how a level plays out when you factor in all of these trucks, which can sometimes number over fifty in a level, moving differently than they did the last time you attempted a level. Sometimes trucks will go a little slower than they did before, or maybe they’ll drift left instead of right. There’s a slight bit of randomness every time you restart a level, making it so you cannot just memorize the exact movement of the trucks to beat the game. Thankfully, you are able to restart near-instantaneously after death, which lead me to keep hitting restart for just ‘one more try’. No, it’s the kind of frustration of knowing that I was oh so close to finishing a level, and that feeling continuously kept me hitting that restart button to try again. But it wasn’t the kind of frustration that makes me want to stop playing. I cried out in frustration multiple times while playing Clustertruck, something I nearly never do when playing games. Levels take only a minute or two apiece, but completing the game takes a whole lot longer with the large amount of deaths you are likely to suffer through. The campaign is made up of nine worlds, each with ten levels. The designs are really varied, and acing a level takes a massive amount of skill and perseverance. Jumping between trucks feels fantastically exciting, there’s very little gravity but the game still maintains a lot of speed, letting you change direction while flying through the air and dropping you to the ground slowly enough that you can control where you land precisely, as long as you’ve got some skill.Īlmost every level offers some new obstacle or challenge to get through. Trucks move at high velocity, exploding when they hit walls or each other, sending trucks (and sometimes the player) flying through the air. The physics are taken to an extreme, allowing for huge leaps and big explosions, but that makes the game a lot better than if the developers had gone for more realistic gameplay. The game is played in first-person, and it controls very well. It’s a basic premise, but it’s executed very, very well. The player must stay atop the trucks while dodging obstacles such as tumbling boulders and spinning lasers, and touching the ground results in an instant death. The feeling of leaping from truck to truck, barely catching the back of trailers and narrowly missing death, is perfectly exhilarating.Ĭlustertruck is a free-running action game in which the main objective is to jump from semi-trailer truck to semi-trailer truck in an attempt to reach a goal post at the end of each level. ‘Exhilarating’ is the best word to describe the feeling of playing Clustertruck. Reviews // 5th Oct 2016 - 7 years ago // By Tyler Spectre Clustertruck Review
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |