Compara los precios de Aegis Defenders en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por GUTS Department. Publicado por Humble Bundle. Lanzado el 8/2/2018. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Action, Adventure, Indie, RPG, Strategy. Puntuación Metacritic: 76/100.

Aegis Defenders blends 2D platforming with tower-defense buildout in a hand-drawn world where planting turrets mid-combat is half the fun.

Aegis Defenders sits in an odd genre corner that not many games bother to occupy: part action-platformer, part tower-defense, with a light RPG skin holding the whole thing together. GUTS Department built something genuinely singular here, and that singularity is both its strongest selling point and the source of most of its friction. You control a small team of Ruinhunters, scavengers picking through the bones of an ancient civilization, and the core loop involves running through side-scrolling levels, gathering materials, then flipping into a defensive phase where you place turrets, barriers, and traps to survive waves of enemies. It sounds clean on paper. In practice it demands a particular kind of mental flexibility that not every player will enjoy. The character roster is small but mechanically distinct. Cael, the scrappy grandson figure, focuses on close combat and basic construction. Kira, his grandmother, leans into ranged attacks and more advanced buildout. The co-op component, which lets a second player control one character while you handle the other, is the mode the game clearly wants you to play. Solo you are constantly swapping between the two, and while the swap system works, it adds a layer of micromanagement that can feel more exhausting than strategic when the enemy waves scale up. If you have a couch co-op partner ready to go, Aegis Defenders becomes significantly more enjoyable. Without one, it is a tighter, lonelier experience. The hand-drawn pixel art is doing serious work here. Backgrounds are lush, enemy designs pull from kaiju and mythological archetypes, and the ancient-ruin aesthetic gives the world a coherent visual identity. The story is modest, a grandfather-granddaughter survival tale set against a backdrop of gods and collapsing empires, and it leans on anime tropes without quite committing to the genre's better storytelling instincts. Cutscenes are earnest, characters are likeable enough, but the writing rarely surprises you. If you came expecting Disco Elysium levels of reactive dialogue or branching consequence, adjust your expectations down several floors. This is a game where the worldbuilding is communicated more through art direction than through text. The combat and tower-placement systems have real depth if you push into them. Different turret types interact with enemy pathing in ways that reward experimentation, and resource scarcity keeps you from just brute-forcing every encounter with the same loadout. Boss fights scale the chaos up meaningfully, throwing ancient-god-tier threats at your defenses and demanding you rethink your build mid-fight. That said, some mid-game levels tip from challenging into outright punishing, and the XP curve has a few lumpy stretches where you will feel like the game is asking you to replay sections not because it is fun but because the numbers need padding. That is the filler-quest problem wearing a different hat, and I noticed it. At 78% positive reviews on Steam and a Metacritic score sitting at 76, Aegis Defenders lands in a respectable-but-not-revelatory zone, and that is about right. It is a game with a clear vision, executed with genuine craft, let down by some balancing roughness and a story that could have used another draft. Genre fans who specifically want the platformer-meets-tower-defense crossover will find enough here to justify the time. Solo RPG players hoping for a deep narrative experience should temper their expectations. Monika, Scout Team

Aegis Defenders

Aegis Defenders

8 feb 2018GUTS DepartmentHumble Bundle
GamerScout opina

Aegis Defenders blends 2D platforming with tower-defense buildout in a hand-drawn world where planting turrets mid-combat is half the fun.

PC
ProtonDB Platinum
Mejor precio disponible
€0.00
en N/A
Mínimo histórico: €0.49

Comparar precios(0 tiendas)

Cargando precios...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Historial de precios

Historical low
€0.495 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€0.45€0.48€0.50€0.535 Jun11 Jun17 Jun22 Jun28 Jun
Tracking prices since 5 Jun 2026
Create alert

Capturas y multimedia

Captura

Acerca de Aegis Defenders

Aegis Defenders sits in an odd genre corner that not many games bother to occupy: part action-platformer, part tower-defense, with a light RPG skin holding the whole thing together. GUTS Department built something genuinely singular here, and that singularity is both its strongest selling point and the source of most of its friction. You control a small team of Ruinhunters, scavengers picking through the bones of an ancient civilization, and the core loop involves running through side-scrolling levels, gathering materials, then flipping into a defensive phase where you place turrets, barriers, and traps to survive waves of enemies. It sounds clean on paper. In practice it demands a particular kind of mental flexibility that not every player will enjoy. The character roster is small but mechanically distinct. Cael, the scrappy grandson figure, focuses on close combat and basic construction. Kira, his grandmother, leans into ranged attacks and more advanced buildout. The co-op component, which lets a second player control one character while you handle the other, is the mode the game clearly wants you to play. Solo you are constantly swapping between the two, and while the swap system works, it adds a layer of micromanagement that can feel more exhausting than strategic when the enemy waves scale up. If you have a couch co-op partner ready to go, Aegis Defenders becomes significantly more enjoyable. Without one, it is a tighter, lonelier experience. The hand-drawn pixel art is doing serious work here. Backgrounds are lush, enemy designs pull from kaiju and mythological archetypes, and the ancient-ruin aesthetic gives the world a coherent visual identity. The story is modest, a grandfather-granddaughter survival tale set against a backdrop of gods and collapsing empires, and it leans on anime tropes without quite committing to the genre's better storytelling instincts. Cutscenes are earnest, characters are likeable enough, but the writing rarely surprises you. If you came expecting Disco Elysium levels of reactive dialogue or branching consequence, adjust your expectations down several floors. This is a game where the worldbuilding is communicated more through art direction than through text. The combat and tower-placement systems have real depth if you push into them. Different turret types interact with enemy pathing in ways that reward experimentation, and resource scarcity keeps you from just brute-forcing every encounter with the same loadout. Boss fights scale the chaos up meaningfully, throwing ancient-god-tier threats at your defenses and demanding you rethink your build mid-fight. That said, some mid-game levels tip from challenging into outright punishing, and the XP curve has a few lumpy stretches where you will feel like the game is asking you to replay sections not because it is fun but because the numbers need padding. That is the filler-quest problem wearing a different hat, and I noticed it. At 78% positive reviews on Steam and a Metacritic score sitting at 76, Aegis Defenders lands in a respectable-but-not-revelatory zone, and that is about right. It is a game with a clear vision, executed with genuine craft, let down by some balancing roughness and a story that could have used another draft. Genre fans who specifically want the platformer-meets-tower-defense crossover will find enough here to justify the time. Solo RPG players hoping for a deep narrative experience should temper their expectations.

Monika
Monika · Scout Team

RPGs

Etiquetas

steamTower-Defense HybridCouch Co-opHand-Drawn ArtDefensive StrategyResource ManagementBoss FightsPixel Art RPGKaiju Enemies

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

Processor
1.2 ghz
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
512 MB video memory
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
2 GB available space

Sigue explorando

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Aegis Defenders.

Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
76
Steam
78%(1,812)

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
GUTS Department
Distribuidora
Humble Bundle
Fecha de lanzamiento
8 feb 2018

Alerta de precio

¡Recibe un aviso cuando el precio baje de tu objetivo!

Crear alerta

Compra mejor: guías útiles

¿Buscas más? Mira juegos como Aegis Defenders →

Preguntas frecuentes sobre Aegis Defenders

¿Cuánto cuesta Aegis Defenders?

El precio de Aegis Defenders cambia a menudo y varía según la tienda, la edición y la región. La tabla de precios en vivo de esta página compara las ofertas más baratas en stock de tiendas de claves de confianza como Eneba y Kinguin, para que siempre veas el precio más bajo actual antes de comprar.

¿Dónde puedo comprar Aegis Defenders más barato?

Compara los precios de Aegis Defenders en todas las tiendas verificadas en la tabla de precios de esta página. Listamos las ofertas de claves y tiendas más baratas en stock, actualizadas con frecuencia, para que siempre veas la mejor oferta actual antes de comprar.

¿En qué plataformas está disponible Aegis Defenders?

Aegis Defenders está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Aegis Defenders?

Aegis Defenders se lanzó el 8 de febrero de 2018.

¿Quién desarrolló Aegis Defenders?

Aegis Defenders fue desarrollado por GUTS Department y publicado por Humble Bundle.

¿Merece la pena comprar Aegis Defenders?

Aegis Defenders tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 76/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Action. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.