Helheim Hassle
A pacifist Viking who pops off his own limbs to solve puzzles, Helheim Hassle is weirder and warmer than anything else on your wishlist.
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Helheim Hassle is a narrative puzzle-platformer built around one of the most quietly brilliant mechanical conceits in recent indie memory: your protagonist, Bjørn, is a Viking who wants absolutely nothing to do with violence, and whose body is helpfully willing to come apart at the joints to solve problems instead. Arms, legs, and head detach and reattach in combinations that gate progress through each level. Need to reach a high ledge? Toss a limb. Need to slip through a gap? Leave the bulk of yourself behind. The puzzle logic is consistent and satisfying once it clicks, and the developers squeeze real variety out of what sounds like a one-note premise. The writing is where the game earns its reputation. Bjørn is not a brooding outsider-hero; he is genuinely, cheerfully committed to non-violence in a world that finds that baffling. The Norse Gods, goblins, dragons, and assorted skeletal antagonists who populate Helheim are written with dry comic timing and real personality. Dialogue runs long in places, but it earns those scenes. The world-building treats Norse mythology as a sandbox for absurdist character comedy rather than a grim-dark aesthetic backdrop, and the contrast makes it land harder. There is a warmth here that a lot of bigger-budget games with larger writing teams simply cannot manufacture. Pacing is deliberate. The opening chapters introduce the limb system slowly, which might frustrate players expecting an immediate mechanical playground. Stick with it. Perfectly Paranormal knows exactly when to withhold and when to pay off, and the puzzle complexity ramps in a way that feels authored rather than algorithmic. The soundtrack matches this rhythm, understated folk-adjacent composition that keeps the mood grounded without ever stepping on the comedy. It is the kind of score you notice when it is gone. On the criticism side: the platforming itself is loose enough that some precise-placement puzzles can tip from satisfying into fiddly. A handful of puzzles in the back half rely on combinations that are not clearly telegraphed, and you will occasionally brute-force your way through by trying every limb configuration. The game is short, roughly four to six hours depending on how much dialogue you absorb, and some players expecting more mechanical depth from the limb system may feel it is under-explored by the end. These are real friction points, not deal-breakers, but worth knowing before you sit down. If you have a soft spot for games that show their handcraft in the script and art direction rather than the budget, Helheim Hassle is the kind of thing that stays with you longer than its runtime suggests. The pixel art is expressive and specific. Bjørn is one of the more memorable protagonists to come out of this decade of indie adventure games. And it knows exactly when to end.

Indie & narrative
Etiquetas
Requisitos del sistema
Mínimos
- Processor
- SSE2 instruction set support.
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- Graphics
- Graphics card with DX10 (shader model 4.0) capabilities. 2GB VRAM.
- DirectX
- Version 10
- Storage
- 1500 MB available space
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Información del juego
- Desarrolladora
- Perfectly Paranormal
- Distribuidora
- Perfectly Paranormal
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- 18 ago 2020
