Compara los precios de Bad Hotel en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Lucky Frame. Publicado por Lucky Frame. Lanzado el 16/10/2013. Disponible en PC, Mac, Linux. Géneros: Casual, Indie.

A BAFTA-winning tower defense that doubles as a living instrument: every turret you bolt onto your crumbling hotel adds a new note to a score only you will ever hear.

I keep coming back to the premise Lucky Frame started with, because it is genuinely one of the best 'what if' questions in indie game history: what if tower defense games were literally about defending a tower? That single joke, hatched during a 48-hour game jam, became Bad Hotel, and the answer turns out to be stranger and more affecting than the question deserves. The setup is wonderfully absurd. A Texas mogul named Tarnation Tadstock wants your little hotel gone, and he has sent wave after wave of seagulls, rats, yetis, ice-lobbing clouds, and dive-bombing snakes to make that happen. Your only tools are rooms: gun turrets that auto-fire at incoming enemies, cannons that launch mines, mortars that spray blocks of ice, healing rooms that patch up your structure, and income rooms that drip money into your building fund so you can keep stacking. Rooms attach to any exposed face of your hotel, letting it grow sideways, upward, or in bizarre asymmetric shapes. The catch, and it is a quietly brutal one, is structural: if the room at the base of a column is destroyed, everything above it collapses with it. Planning your architecture matters in a way that most tower defense games never ask of you. But Bad Hotel's real trick is the soundtrack, and this is where Lucky Frame earns its oddball reputation fully. Every room you place adds a note or a rhythmic layer to a procedurally generated composition. Gun turrets contribute percussive pops, healing rooms hum, income rooms chime. As your hotel grows, so does the music, layering into something between jazz, ambient drone, and glitchy noise depending on how chaotically you build. It can dissolve into a discordant mess when things go wrong, and that is not always unpleasant, because the collapse of the music mirrors the collapse of your structure in a way that no explicit feedback system could replicate. It is one of those design decisions that sounds pretentious on paper and lands with surprising warmth in practice. A few caveats are honest ones. The game began life on iOS touchscreens, and the PC port, while fully functional, translates touch-drag placement into mouse drag-and-drop with some awkwardness. Placement precision under pressure can frustrate, especially later when levels strip away your offensive options or introduce enemies that hit alarmingly hard. Level balance is uneven: some stages feel meticulously tuned, others swing between trivially easy and punishingly opaque with no apparent middle ground. The Steam community reception has also been predominantly negative, suggesting the experience is more polarising on PC than critics of the iOS version anticipated. The honest read is that Bad Hotel asks you to appreciate it on its own eccentric terms, and players who approach it expecting a conventional genre workout will push back hard. For the right person, though, this is a tiny, handcrafted game that knows exactly what it is. The Art Deco visual style, all bold geometry and saturated vintage palettes, gives it a personality that most budget-tier PC ports completely lack. It is short, it is weird, and the music it makes is entirely yours. No two runs sound the same, and there is something genuinely touching about that. Kai, Scout Team

Bad Hotel

Bad Hotel

16 oct 2013Lucky Frame
GamerScout opina

A BAFTA-winning tower defense that doubles as a living instrument: every turret you bolt onto your crumbling hotel adds a new note to a score only you will ever hear.

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Mínimo histórico: €0.48

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I keep coming back to the premise Lucky Frame started with, because it is genuinely one of the best 'what if' questions in indie game history: what if tower defense games were literally about defending a tower? That single joke, hatched during a 48-hour game jam, became Bad Hotel, and the answer turns out to be stranger and more affecting than the question deserves. The setup is wonderfully absurd. A Texas mogul named Tarnation Tadstock wants your little hotel gone, and he has sent wave after wave of seagulls, rats, yetis, ice-lobbing clouds, and dive-bombing snakes to make that happen. Your only tools are rooms: gun turrets that auto-fire at incoming enemies, cannons that launch mines, mortars that spray blocks of ice, healing rooms that patch up your structure, and income rooms that drip money into your building fund so you can keep stacking. Rooms attach to any exposed face of your hotel, letting it grow sideways, upward, or in bizarre asymmetric shapes. The catch, and it is a quietly brutal one, is structural: if the room at the base of a column is destroyed, everything above it collapses with it. Planning your architecture matters in a way that most tower defense games never ask of you. But Bad Hotel's real trick is the soundtrack, and this is where Lucky Frame earns its oddball reputation fully. Every room you place adds a note or a rhythmic layer to a procedurally generated composition. Gun turrets contribute percussive pops, healing rooms hum, income rooms chime. As your hotel grows, so does the music, layering into something between jazz, ambient drone, and glitchy noise depending on how chaotically you build. It can dissolve into a discordant mess when things go wrong, and that is not always unpleasant, because the collapse of the music mirrors the collapse of your structure in a way that no explicit feedback system could replicate. It is one of those design decisions that sounds pretentious on paper and lands with surprising warmth in practice. A few caveats are honest ones. The game began life on iOS touchscreens, and the PC port, while fully functional, translates touch-drag placement into mouse drag-and-drop with some awkwardness. Placement precision under pressure can frustrate, especially later when levels strip away your offensive options or introduce enemies that hit alarmingly hard. Level balance is uneven: some stages feel meticulously tuned, others swing between trivially easy and punishingly opaque with no apparent middle ground. The Steam community reception has also been predominantly negative, suggesting the experience is more polarising on PC than critics of the iOS version anticipated. The honest read is that Bad Hotel asks you to appreciate it on its own eccentric terms, and players who approach it expecting a conventional genre workout will push back hard. For the right person, though, this is a tiny, handcrafted game that knows exactly what it is. The Art Deco visual style, all bold geometry and saturated vintage palettes, gives it a personality that most budget-tier PC ports completely lack. It is short, it is weird, and the music it makes is entirely yours. No two runs sound the same, and there is something genuinely touching about that.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Procedural MusicTower DefenseArt DecoLudum Dare OriginiOS PortGenerative SoundtrackStructural Strategy

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
XP
Memory
1 GB RAM
Storage
150 MB available space

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OS
7
Memory
2 GB RAM

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Lucky Frame
Distribuidora
Lucky Frame
Fecha de lanzamiento
16 oct 2013

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Bad Hotel?

Bad Hotel está disponible en PC, Mac, Linux.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Bad Hotel?

Bad Hotel se lanzó el 16 de octubre de 2013.

¿Quién desarrolló Bad Hotel?

Bad Hotel fue desarrollado por Lucky Frame.