Compara los precios de Crimsonland key en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por 10tons Ltd. Publicado por 10tacle Studios. Lanzado el 11/6/2014. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Action, Indie, RPG. Puntuación Metacritic: 68/100.

Top-down twin-stick carnage where alien hordes never stop and your only job is to keep pulling the trigger. Survival mode will eat your afternoon.

Crimsonland is a top-down arena shooter that strips the genre down to its most honest proposition: you stand in a field, things want you dead, and you shoot them until one side runs out. Developed by 10tons Ltd and originally a cult classic from the early 2000s before its 2014 PC re-release, it offers a quest mode of around 60 levels and a suite of survival modes that are, frankly, where the real addiction lives. The camera never moves from its overhead lock, the arenas are flat and functional, and the entire visual identity is built around increasingly obscene pools of crimson spreading across grey terrain. It is not subtle. It is not trying to be. The RPG hook here is light but genuine. As you kill, you level up mid-run and choose perks from a randomised selection. Options include reload speed boosts, ricocheting bullets, health regeneration, and a handful of wilder upgrades that can genuinely warp how a run feels. The perk system has enough combinations to make you restart a survival session just to chase a specific synergy, which is the exact quality a roguelite-adjacent mechanic needs. Weapons cycle through a familiar arsenal - shotguns, rocket launchers, plasma rifles, flamethrowers - and swapping between them as ammo depletes creates a low-key resource pressure that keeps idle hands busy. It is not build variety on the level of a proper ARPG, but for a score-chaser it holds up well past the early hours. The quest mode functions more as a tutorial that overstays its welcome. Levels introduce new enemy types and weapons at a reasonable pace early on, but the middle stretch starts to feel like XP padding dressed up as content. Enemy variety is limited enough that by the third biome you have seen most of what the game wants to throw at you, and the difficulty curve flattens awkwardly in places. Boss encounters exist but are not exactly memorable narrative beats - they are bigger versions of standard enemies with more health, which is fine in context but nothing to write home about. The writing is minimal by design, so anyone arriving for story will leave immediately and correctly. Where Crimsonland genuinely earns its Very Positive rating is in the survival leaderboard loop. The six survival modes, including the punishing Nukefism mode that strips you back to a single weapon with no pickups, provide a competitive sandbox that rewards mastery. Local co-op for up to four players amplifies the chaos in all the right ways, turning the already-busy screen into something approaching abstract art made of bullet trails and corpses. It runs on modest hardware without complaint, controls tightly with either keyboard-and-mouse or a gamepad, and sessions are short enough to fit into a lunch break while long enough to miss one. As an RPG specialist I will be honest: the depth here is real but narrow. The perk drafting is satisfying in a card-game-adjacent way, and optimising a survival run around a specific build is genuinely engaging for a certain kind of player. But if you arrive expecting character arcs, dialogue choices, or worldbuilding with any texture, you will bounce off immediately. Crimsonland knows exactly what it is, executes that thing with precision, and does not pretend otherwise. For fans of arena shooters and high-score chasers who appreciate a light progression layer on top of their carnage, it delivers cleanly. Monika, Scout Team

Crimsonland key

Crimsonland key

11 jun 201410tons Ltd10tacle Studios
GamerScout opina

Top-down twin-stick carnage where alien hordes never stop and your only job is to keep pulling the trigger. Survival mode will eat your afternoon.

PC
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum
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€0.00
en N/A
Mínimo histórico: €1.63

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Crimsonland is a top-down arena shooter that strips the genre down to its most honest proposition: you stand in a field, things want you dead, and you shoot them until one side runs out. Developed by 10tons Ltd and originally a cult classic from the early 2000s before its 2014 PC re-release, it offers a quest mode of around 60 levels and a suite of survival modes that are, frankly, where the real addiction lives. The camera never moves from its overhead lock, the arenas are flat and functional, and the entire visual identity is built around increasingly obscene pools of crimson spreading across grey terrain. It is not subtle. It is not trying to be. The RPG hook here is light but genuine. As you kill, you level up mid-run and choose perks from a randomised selection. Options include reload speed boosts, ricocheting bullets, health regeneration, and a handful of wilder upgrades that can genuinely warp how a run feels. The perk system has enough combinations to make you restart a survival session just to chase a specific synergy, which is the exact quality a roguelite-adjacent mechanic needs. Weapons cycle through a familiar arsenal - shotguns, rocket launchers, plasma rifles, flamethrowers - and swapping between them as ammo depletes creates a low-key resource pressure that keeps idle hands busy. It is not build variety on the level of a proper ARPG, but for a score-chaser it holds up well past the early hours. The quest mode functions more as a tutorial that overstays its welcome. Levels introduce new enemy types and weapons at a reasonable pace early on, but the middle stretch starts to feel like XP padding dressed up as content. Enemy variety is limited enough that by the third biome you have seen most of what the game wants to throw at you, and the difficulty curve flattens awkwardly in places. Boss encounters exist but are not exactly memorable narrative beats - they are bigger versions of standard enemies with more health, which is fine in context but nothing to write home about. The writing is minimal by design, so anyone arriving for story will leave immediately and correctly. Where Crimsonland genuinely earns its Very Positive rating is in the survival leaderboard loop. The six survival modes, including the punishing Nukefism mode that strips you back to a single weapon with no pickups, provide a competitive sandbox that rewards mastery. Local co-op for up to four players amplifies the chaos in all the right ways, turning the already-busy screen into something approaching abstract art made of bullet trails and corpses. It runs on modest hardware without complaint, controls tightly with either keyboard-and-mouse or a gamepad, and sessions are short enough to fit into a lunch break while long enough to miss one. As an RPG specialist I will be honest: the depth here is real but narrow. The perk drafting is satisfying in a card-game-adjacent way, and optimising a survival run around a specific build is genuinely engaging for a certain kind of player. But if you arrive expecting character arcs, dialogue choices, or worldbuilding with any texture, you will bounce off immediately. Crimsonland knows exactly what it is, executes that thing with precision, and does not pretend otherwise. For fans of arena shooters and high-score chasers who appreciate a light progression layer on top of their carnage, it delivers cleanly.

Monika
Monika · Scout Team

RPGs

Etiquetas

steamTop-Down ShooterArena SurvivalPerk DraftingTwin-StickLocal Co-opHigh Score ChaseRoguelite ElementsHorde Mode

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

Processor
1 Ghz
Memory
512 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 8.1
Storage
200 MB available space

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
68
Steam
93%(3,092)

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
10tons Ltd
Distribuidora
10tacle Studios
Fecha de lanzamiento
11 jun 2014

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Crimsonland key?

Crimsonland key está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Crimsonland key?

Crimsonland key se lanzó el 11 de junio de 2014.

¿Quién desarrolló Crimsonland key?

Crimsonland key fue desarrollado por 10tons Ltd y publicado por 10tacle Studios.

¿Merece la pena comprar Crimsonland key?

Crimsonland key tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 68/100, 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.