Compara los precios de Iron Danger en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Action Squad Studios. Publicado por Daedalic Entertainment. Lanzado el 25/3/2020. Disponible en PC, Xbox. Géneros: Action, Adventure, Indie, Strategy. Puntuación Metacritic: 73/100.

Iron Danger is a tactical puzzler where you rewind time to unsnarl bad decisions, one action at a time. Clever mechanic, small world.

Iron Danger sits in a genuinely odd corner of the strategy genre. It is not a grand-strategy game, not a traditional turn-based RPG, and not a real-time tactics title, even though it borrows pieces from all three. The core hook is a time-rewind system that lets you dial back individual character actions in short windows, replaying moments until the positioning, ability timing, and attack sequencing clicks into place. The result is something closer to a deterministic puzzle game than a freeform tactics experience. If you like figuring out the optimal move order for a combat encounter the same way you would crack a logic puzzle, the premise delivers. You control a small party, usually two characters, across encounters set in a Nordic-flavored world mixing steampunk machinery with folklore. The rewind system is the design center: every action, every footstep, every sword swing sits on a short timeline you can scrub back and forth. Found a better angle for Kipuna's fire ability? Rewind three seconds. Realized Topi walked into a flanking position that kills him? Rewind five seconds, redirect him. On paper this sounds forgiving, and mechanically it is, but Action Squad Studios uses that safety net to make the encounter design genuinely demanding. Enemies hit hard, ability windows are tight, and the correct solution to many fights requires near-surgical sequencing. The game respects you enough to let you fail creatively before you find the line. Where the wheels wobble is in scope and pacing. Iron Danger is a short game, landing somewhere between eight and twelve hours depending on how many times you rewind into a wall. The world is interesting in outline but thin in detail. Character writing is serviceable, not sharp. There is no meaningful build progression, no gear system worth analyzing, and no late-game complexity curve that rewards deep mastery. Players who come in expecting systems to optimize across a campaign will find the cupboard sparse. The mechanic carries the whole experience, and when the encounter design is good it absolutely does, but there are stretches where fights feel repetitive and the puzzle solutions become formulaic. The tutorial is short and honest. It explains the timeline mechanic cleanly without burying newcomers in jargon, which is worth noting because the concept sounds more complicated than it plays. If you have never touched a tactics game, Iron Danger is actually a reasonable entry point precisely because the rewind system removes the permadeath anxiety that locks people out of the genre. You can experiment freely, and the consequences are immediate and reversible. That low floor is a genuine design virtue even if the ceiling does not sit especially high. Mod support is essentially absent, and the PC-only release means no console port to broaden the audience. The Mixed Steam rating reflects a real split: players who tuned into the puzzle-tactics wavelength found it satisfying, players expecting something more systemic bounced off the limited progression. At its best, Iron Danger is an elegant one-trick act with a trick genuinely worth seeing. At its worst, it is a short, somewhat repetitive curio that exhausts its own ideas before the credits roll. Worth a look for tactics fans who want something unusual and compact, but do not expect a system to sink a hundred hours into. Diego, Scout Team

Iron Danger

Iron Danger

25 mar 2020Action Squad StudiosDaedalic Entertainment
GamerScout opina

Iron Danger is a tactical puzzler where you rewind time to unsnarl bad decisions, one action at a time. Clever mechanic, small world.

PCXbox
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum
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Iron Danger sits in a genuinely odd corner of the strategy genre. It is not a grand-strategy game, not a traditional turn-based RPG, and not a real-time tactics title, even though it borrows pieces from all three. The core hook is a time-rewind system that lets you dial back individual character actions in short windows, replaying moments until the positioning, ability timing, and attack sequencing clicks into place. The result is something closer to a deterministic puzzle game than a freeform tactics experience. If you like figuring out the optimal move order for a combat encounter the same way you would crack a logic puzzle, the premise delivers. You control a small party, usually two characters, across encounters set in a Nordic-flavored world mixing steampunk machinery with folklore. The rewind system is the design center: every action, every footstep, every sword swing sits on a short timeline you can scrub back and forth. Found a better angle for Kipuna's fire ability? Rewind three seconds. Realized Topi walked into a flanking position that kills him? Rewind five seconds, redirect him. On paper this sounds forgiving, and mechanically it is, but Action Squad Studios uses that safety net to make the encounter design genuinely demanding. Enemies hit hard, ability windows are tight, and the correct solution to many fights requires near-surgical sequencing. The game respects you enough to let you fail creatively before you find the line. Where the wheels wobble is in scope and pacing. Iron Danger is a short game, landing somewhere between eight and twelve hours depending on how many times you rewind into a wall. The world is interesting in outline but thin in detail. Character writing is serviceable, not sharp. There is no meaningful build progression, no gear system worth analyzing, and no late-game complexity curve that rewards deep mastery. Players who come in expecting systems to optimize across a campaign will find the cupboard sparse. The mechanic carries the whole experience, and when the encounter design is good it absolutely does, but there are stretches where fights feel repetitive and the puzzle solutions become formulaic. The tutorial is short and honest. It explains the timeline mechanic cleanly without burying newcomers in jargon, which is worth noting because the concept sounds more complicated than it plays. If you have never touched a tactics game, Iron Danger is actually a reasonable entry point precisely because the rewind system removes the permadeath anxiety that locks people out of the genre. You can experiment freely, and the consequences are immediate and reversible. That low floor is a genuine design virtue even if the ceiling does not sit especially high. Mod support is essentially absent, and the PC-only release means no console port to broaden the audience. The Mixed Steam rating reflects a real split: players who tuned into the puzzle-tactics wavelength found it satisfying, players expecting something more systemic bounced off the limited progression. At its best, Iron Danger is an elegant one-trick act with a trick genuinely worth seeing. At its worst, it is a short, somewhat repetitive curio that exhausts its own ideas before the credits roll. Worth a look for tactics fans who want something unusual and compact, but do not expect a system to sink a hundred hours into.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

steamTime RewindTactical PuzzlerSmall Party CombatFixed EncountersNordic SettingBeginner FriendlyLinear CampaignAbility Sequencing

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
64-bit Windows 10
Processor
Intel CPU Core i5 3.3GHz / AMD CPU FX-8320
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX 960 3GB / AMD R9 280 3GB
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
14…

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OS
64-bit Windows 10
Processor
Intel CPU Core i7 4.00GHz / AMD Ryzen 5 2600
Memory
12 GB RAM
Graphics
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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
73
Steam
73%(1,007)

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Action Squad Studios
Distribuidora
Daedalic Entertainment
Fecha de lanzamiento
25 mar 2020

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Iron Danger?

Iron Danger está disponible en PC, Xbox.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Iron Danger?

Iron Danger se lanzó el 25 de marzo de 2020.

¿Quién desarrolló Iron Danger?

Iron Danger fue desarrollado por Action Squad Studios y publicado por Daedalic Entertainment.

¿Merece la pena comprar Iron Danger?

Iron Danger tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 73/100, 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.