Compara los precios de Armored Freedom en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Killer Bees Games. Publicado por Killer Bees Games. Lanzado el 21/7/2017. Disponible en PC, Mac, Linux. Géneros: Strategy.

A hex-grid mech brawler built on dice rolls and battle cards that wants to be tactical but leans so hard on RNG it barely qualifies as strategy.

I came into Armored Freedom genuinely curious, because mech combat on a hex board sounds like my kind of weekend detour. Two hours later I understood why the Steam rating sits at roughly 18% positive. The promise is a turn-based boardgame where you move mechs across a hex grid, engage with battle cards, and outmaneuver opponents across four terrain types: forest, desert, snow, and a pared-down zen board. On paper that framework has bones. In practice, almost every meaningful decision is quietly made for you by a dice roll. Movement works by rolling dice to determine how far each mech can travel per turn. If the number is bad, you are stuck. Combat resolution is card-based, but the cards are drawn randomly and cycled back randomly, so the number printed in the corner of your attack card versus the number on the enemy's defense card is the only thing that actually matters. That, and whether the card you just drew happens to cover the range to your target. There is no hand management, no resource curve, no build-around synergy. The hero units with special abilities add a thin layer of variety, but not enough to give the player consistent agency. A Japanese Steam community post puts it politely: roughly translated, it reads "feels more than half luck." The four gameplay modes (including skirmish and a campaign) do exist, and cross-platform PvP is a genuine feature, which is unusual for a game at this price tier. Pilot and mech customization, rank progression, and unlockable items suggest someone had a roadmap in mind. But the multiplayer population is effectively zero, the Linux build has documented input-registration failures, and the tutorial is two sentences per screen, nowhere near enough to orient new players. The developer's own early roadmap mentioned capture-the-flag, boss battles, and stable competitive multiplayer as goals, and that those features never fully materialized is obvious from the community hub activity. The one critic review that exists for this game dismissed it with scorched-earth language, and that reaction is understandable even if it is harsh. The art direction is inoffensive, and the core concept of mech skirmishes on a hex grid with card-driven combat is not inherently broken. But without any meaningful weight to deck composition, positioning, or mech loadouts, there is nothing to learn and therefore nothing to improve at. That is the ceiling issue. Shooters spoil you with TTK feedback loops and skill expression; strategy games should at least offer the illusion of mastery. Armored Freedom offers neither. Fred, Scout Team

Armored Freedom

Armored Freedom

21 jul 2017Killer Bees Games
GamerScout opina

A hex-grid mech brawler built on dice rolls and battle cards that wants to be tactical but leans so hard on RNG it barely qualifies as strategy.

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I came into Armored Freedom genuinely curious, because mech combat on a hex board sounds like my kind of weekend detour. Two hours later I understood why the Steam rating sits at roughly 18% positive. The promise is a turn-based boardgame where you move mechs across a hex grid, engage with battle cards, and outmaneuver opponents across four terrain types: forest, desert, snow, and a pared-down zen board. On paper that framework has bones. In practice, almost every meaningful decision is quietly made for you by a dice roll. Movement works by rolling dice to determine how far each mech can travel per turn. If the number is bad, you are stuck. Combat resolution is card-based, but the cards are drawn randomly and cycled back randomly, so the number printed in the corner of your attack card versus the number on the enemy's defense card is the only thing that actually matters. That, and whether the card you just drew happens to cover the range to your target. There is no hand management, no resource curve, no build-around synergy. The hero units with special abilities add a thin layer of variety, but not enough to give the player consistent agency. A Japanese Steam community post puts it politely: roughly translated, it reads "feels more than half luck." The four gameplay modes (including skirmish and a campaign) do exist, and cross-platform PvP is a genuine feature, which is unusual for a game at this price tier. Pilot and mech customization, rank progression, and unlockable items suggest someone had a roadmap in mind. But the multiplayer population is effectively zero, the Linux build has documented input-registration failures, and the tutorial is two sentences per screen, nowhere near enough to orient new players. The developer's own early roadmap mentioned capture-the-flag, boss battles, and stable competitive multiplayer as goals, and that those features never fully materialized is obvious from the community hub activity. The one critic review that exists for this game dismissed it with scorched-earth language, and that reaction is understandable even if it is harsh. The art direction is inoffensive, and the core concept of mech skirmishes on a hex grid with card-driven combat is not inherently broken. But without any meaningful weight to deck composition, positioning, or mech loadouts, there is nothing to learn and therefore nothing to improve at. That is the ceiling issue. Shooters spoil you with TTK feedback loops and skill expression; strategy games should at least offer the illusion of mastery. Armored Freedom offers neither.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

Shooters

Etiquetas

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvpcross-platformachievementstrading-cardstier:sub-5Hex GridCard-Driven CombatRNG-HeavyMechTurn-Based TacticsLow Player CountCross-Platform PvPBoardgame-Style

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows XP/Vista/7/8/10
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
900 MB available space
Graphics
512 MB VRAM (Shader Model 3)
Processor
2 GHz Dual Core
Sound Card
DirectX compatible

Recomendados

OS
Windows 7/8/10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
900 MB available space
Graphics
SM4 1GB VRAM
Processor
Intel Core i5
Sound Card
DirectX compatible

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Killer Bees Games
Distribuidora
Killer Bees Games
Fecha de lanzamiento
21 jul 2017

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Armored Freedom?

Armored Freedom está disponible en PC, Mac, Linux.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Armored Freedom?

Armored Freedom se lanzó el 21 de julio de 2017.

¿Quién desarrolló Armored Freedom?

Armored Freedom fue desarrollado por Killer Bees Games.