Compara los precios de Blood of the Werewolf en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Scientifically Proven. Publicado por Ziggurat. Lanzado el 28/10/2013. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Action, Indie. Puntuación Metacritic: 65/100.

A gothic horror platformer that earns its Castlevania comparisons but fumbles them just enough to remind you it isn't Castlevania. Worth your time if spikes, crossbows, and movie-monster bosses speak to you.

I have a soft spot for games that wear their influences openly, and Blood of the Werewolf wears them on both sleeves. Scientifically Proven built a side-scrolling action platformer clearly soaked in memories of Castlevania, Mega Man, and Contra, and the result lands somewhere between loving tribute and uneven execution. You play as Selena, one of the last surviving werewolves, alternating between her crossbow-wielding human form indoors and her more agile wolf form whenever the moonlight hits. That shift is the game's best mechanic: indoors, you're picking off harpies and bats with a 360-degree-aiming crossbow that can be upgraded with split arrows, fire rounds, or a multi-shot burst; outside under the full moon, Selena gains a double jump, ledge-grab, a charging dash, and claw attacks for close-quarters monsters. Both modes have their own upgrade trees, and collectible sigils scattered through each stage permanently increase your max health, which does encourage a second look at levels you've already bulldozed through. The atmosphere lands well. The art direction is angular and vivid, gothic color palettes that feel more Halloween-parade than genuinely sinister, and the soundtrack threads a haunting tone through the stages without tipping into parody. Voice acting for Selena is notably committed for a small indie production, and the between-level story vignettes, while simple, give the revenge plot just enough emotional weight. The five boss encounters face classic Universal-Horror figures: Dracula, Frankenstein's monster, the Mummy, Hyde, and the Creature. On paper that lineup is a dream. In practice the boss fights are the game's strangest contradiction: the surrounding levels will punish you hard, but the bosses themselves are far too readable, with telegraphed patterns that fall apart once you recognize the tells, which happens fast. Difficulty is where the mixed Steam reception (sitting at roughly 59 percent positive across a few hundred reviews) makes total sense. The first few stages feel accessible, then certain sections spike into near-pixel-perfect territory without much warning. Knockback from enemy hits is severe, and in levels like the Factory, a single fireball can send Selena flying into lava she cannot recover from. There is no difficulty selection whatsoever. The game does compensate slightly: unlimited lives, generous checkpoints that refill your meters on respawn, and quick reload times all soften the blow. But the difficulty curve is genuinely inconsistent rather than deliberately brutal, which is a different feeling from the "hard but fair" ideal the developers were aiming for. Beyond Story Mode, there is a Score Rush mode, an Endless Challenge with procedurally generated stages, and a Speedrun mode backed by online leaderboards. If the base game clicks for you, those extra modes have real replay value, particularly for achievement hunters: there are over 100 achievements tied to things like kill counts, speed, and level grades. Keyboard-and-mouse controls are functional but awkward given the 360-degree crossbow aiming; a controller is the obvious and strongly recommended choice. One last note for the mood-sensitive: the soundtrack has a genuine atmosphere that I kept noticing between deaths. It does not match the legacy giants it nods toward, but it has its own quiet character. Kai, Scout Team

Blood of the Werewolf

Blood of the Werewolf

28 oct 2013Scientifically ProvenZiggurat
GamerScout opina

A gothic horror platformer that earns its Castlevania comparisons but fumbles them just enough to remind you it isn't Castlevania. Worth your time if spikes, crossbows, and movie-monster bosses speak to you.

PC
ProtonDB Platinum
Mejor precio disponible
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en N/A
Mínimo histórico: €1.92

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I have a soft spot for games that wear their influences openly, and Blood of the Werewolf wears them on both sleeves. Scientifically Proven built a side-scrolling action platformer clearly soaked in memories of Castlevania, Mega Man, and Contra, and the result lands somewhere between loving tribute and uneven execution. You play as Selena, one of the last surviving werewolves, alternating between her crossbow-wielding human form indoors and her more agile wolf form whenever the moonlight hits. That shift is the game's best mechanic: indoors, you're picking off harpies and bats with a 360-degree-aiming crossbow that can be upgraded with split arrows, fire rounds, or a multi-shot burst; outside under the full moon, Selena gains a double jump, ledge-grab, a charging dash, and claw attacks for close-quarters monsters. Both modes have their own upgrade trees, and collectible sigils scattered through each stage permanently increase your max health, which does encourage a second look at levels you've already bulldozed through. The atmosphere lands well. The art direction is angular and vivid, gothic color palettes that feel more Halloween-parade than genuinely sinister, and the soundtrack threads a haunting tone through the stages without tipping into parody. Voice acting for Selena is notably committed for a small indie production, and the between-level story vignettes, while simple, give the revenge plot just enough emotional weight. The five boss encounters face classic Universal-Horror figures: Dracula, Frankenstein's monster, the Mummy, Hyde, and the Creature. On paper that lineup is a dream. In practice the boss fights are the game's strangest contradiction: the surrounding levels will punish you hard, but the bosses themselves are far too readable, with telegraphed patterns that fall apart once you recognize the tells, which happens fast. Difficulty is where the mixed Steam reception (sitting at roughly 59 percent positive across a few hundred reviews) makes total sense. The first few stages feel accessible, then certain sections spike into near-pixel-perfect territory without much warning. Knockback from enemy hits is severe, and in levels like the Factory, a single fireball can send Selena flying into lava she cannot recover from. There is no difficulty selection whatsoever. The game does compensate slightly: unlimited lives, generous checkpoints that refill your meters on respawn, and quick reload times all soften the blow. But the difficulty curve is genuinely inconsistent rather than deliberately brutal, which is a different feeling from the "hard but fair" ideal the developers were aiming for. Beyond Story Mode, there is a Score Rush mode, an Endless Challenge with procedurally generated stages, and a Speedrun mode backed by online leaderboards. If the base game clicks for you, those extra modes have real replay value, particularly for achievement hunters: there are over 100 achievements tied to things like kill counts, speed, and level grades. Keyboard-and-mouse controls are functional but awkward given the 360-degree crossbow aiming; a controller is the obvious and strongly recommended choice. One last note for the mood-sensitive: the soundtrack has a genuine atmosphere that I kept noticing between deaths. It does not match the legacy giants it nods toward, but it has its own quiet character.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardstier:sub-5Dual-Form GameplayCrossbow CombatWerewolf TransformationClassic Monster BossesHardcore PlatformerSpeedrun ModeScore AttackSigil CollectiblesUnlimited LivesGothic Atmosphere

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows XP SP3, Windows Vista SP1, Windows 7, Windows 8
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
512MB Video Card using Shader Model 3 or higher, AMD Radeon HD 2900 GT or NVIDIA GeForce 9500 GT or better
Processor
2.0Ghz Dual Core CPU (any Core 2 Duo or AMD X2 or better)

Recomendados

OS
Windows XP SP3, Windows Vista SP1, Windows 7, Windows 8
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
1 GB Video Card using Shader Model 3 or Higher, AMD Radeon 7670 or NVIDIA GeForce GTX 280 or better
Processor
3.0GHz Quad Core Processor

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
65

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Scientifically Proven
Distribuidora
Ziggurat
Fecha de lanzamiento
28 oct 2013

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Blood of the Werewolf?

Blood of the Werewolf está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Blood of the Werewolf?

Blood of the Werewolf se lanzó el 28 de octubre de 2013.

¿Quién desarrolló Blood of the Werewolf?

Blood of the Werewolf fue desarrollado por Scientifically Proven y publicado por Ziggurat.

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Blood of the Werewolf tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 65/100, 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.