Compara los precios de Robot Rescue Revolution en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Teyon. Publicado por Teyon. Lanzado el 11/7/2014. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Casual, Indie.

One clever mechanic, one hundred levels, and zero hand-holding: the linked-control puzzle concept is genuinely interesting, but the execution tests patience more than ingenuity.

My first few minutes with Robot Rescue Revolution felt like a quiet little eureka. You press left, and every robot on the screen moves left simultaneously. They are all in different positions inside a single-screen maze, facing different hazards, and the only input available is a direction. That single constraint, all robots mirroring your command regardless of where they stand, is a genuinely elegant puzzle foundation. Sokoban used a similar spirit of indirect logic, and there is a distant family resemblance here worth acknowledging. The problem is that the game never fully trusts the idea. The three worlds, Jungle, Winter Wonderland, and Hi-Tech, each introduce new trap types: flame throwers, Tesla machines, color-coded doors triggered by switches elsewhere on the map, conveyor belts, cloning machines that multiply your robots, teleporters, glue patches that freeze a robot for one turn, and even Sokoban-style pushable objects. On paper that is a rich toolkit. In practice, reviewers who covered the console release consistently noted that the difficulty curve spikes awkwardly early and then settles into repetition rather than escalating cleverness. The roughly ninety-five single-player maps, plus fifteen tutorial stages, give you a lot of screen time, but the feeling of genuine aha-moment design becomes sparse past the first world. The art style is where I have the most personal reservation. The top-down presentation is clean enough to read at a glance, but the overall aesthetic lacks the kind of considered handcraft that makes a small puzzle game feel like it cares about you. The visuals were described by multiple outlet reviewers as messy or overly fussy, and that tracks when you actually watch footage: there is a lot happening on screen without a strong visual hierarchy guiding the eye. For a game where reading the board in one second is the entire skill, clarity should have been the absolute priority. There is genuine value in the local multiplayer suite. Co-op mode lets a second player share the burden of guiding their own set of robots, and the competitive Compete Mode puts two players on identical-but-mirrored maps to race for the exit first. The two-player pool has forty-five dedicated levels, which is a solid amount of couch content. The level editor, which lets you build and upload custom maps, adds a ceiling on longevity that the solo campaign alone would not justify. Whether an active community still exists around custom level sharing in 2024 is a fair question with no clean answer. For a very specific audience, mainly players who loved Chip's Challenge, classic Sokoban variants, or the older handheld Robot Rescue titles that preceded this, there is enough mechanical DNA here to warrant exploration at a low price point. The core concept is not broken. The score system, which grades each cleared level on move count and time, offers a secondary challenge loop for completionists chasing leaderboard positions. But if you are coming in hoping for the same crafted-puzzle warmth of a Stephen's Sausage Roll or even a mid-tier Picross session, the lack of authorial care in level design will feel like a missed handshake. Kai, Scout Team

Robot Rescue Revolution

Robot Rescue Revolution

11 jul 2014Teyon
GamerScout opina

One clever mechanic, one hundred levels, and zero hand-holding: the linked-control puzzle concept is genuinely interesting, but the execution tests patience more than ingenuity.

PC
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Mínimo histórico: €2.56

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Acerca de Robot Rescue Revolution

My first few minutes with Robot Rescue Revolution felt like a quiet little eureka. You press left, and every robot on the screen moves left simultaneously. They are all in different positions inside a single-screen maze, facing different hazards, and the only input available is a direction. That single constraint, all robots mirroring your command regardless of where they stand, is a genuinely elegant puzzle foundation. Sokoban used a similar spirit of indirect logic, and there is a distant family resemblance here worth acknowledging. The problem is that the game never fully trusts the idea. The three worlds, Jungle, Winter Wonderland, and Hi-Tech, each introduce new trap types: flame throwers, Tesla machines, color-coded doors triggered by switches elsewhere on the map, conveyor belts, cloning machines that multiply your robots, teleporters, glue patches that freeze a robot for one turn, and even Sokoban-style pushable objects. On paper that is a rich toolkit. In practice, reviewers who covered the console release consistently noted that the difficulty curve spikes awkwardly early and then settles into repetition rather than escalating cleverness. The roughly ninety-five single-player maps, plus fifteen tutorial stages, give you a lot of screen time, but the feeling of genuine aha-moment design becomes sparse past the first world. The art style is where I have the most personal reservation. The top-down presentation is clean enough to read at a glance, but the overall aesthetic lacks the kind of considered handcraft that makes a small puzzle game feel like it cares about you. The visuals were described by multiple outlet reviewers as messy or overly fussy, and that tracks when you actually watch footage: there is a lot happening on screen without a strong visual hierarchy guiding the eye. For a game where reading the board in one second is the entire skill, clarity should have been the absolute priority. There is genuine value in the local multiplayer suite. Co-op mode lets a second player share the burden of guiding their own set of robots, and the competitive Compete Mode puts two players on identical-but-mirrored maps to race for the exit first. The two-player pool has forty-five dedicated levels, which is a solid amount of couch content. The level editor, which lets you build and upload custom maps, adds a ceiling on longevity that the solo campaign alone would not justify. Whether an active community still exists around custom level sharing in 2024 is a fair question with no clean answer. For a very specific audience, mainly players who loved Chip's Challenge, classic Sokoban variants, or the older handheld Robot Rescue titles that preceded this, there is enough mechanical DNA here to warrant exploration at a low price point. The core concept is not broken. The score system, which grades each cleared level on move count and time, offers a secondary challenge loop for completionists chasing leaderboard positions. But if you are coming in hoping for the same crafted-puzzle warmth of a Stephen's Sausage Roll or even a mid-tier Picross session, the lack of authorial care in level design will feel like a missed handshake.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayermultiplayerlocal-coopachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Sokoban-likeLinked ControlsTop-Down PuzzleCouch Co-opCompete ModeLevel EditorSingle-Screen LevelsMove-Count Scoring

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows XP or newer
Memory
1500 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
600 MB available space
Graphics
Direct3D 10 capable video card (NVIDIA® Geforce 8800 GT or AMD® Radeon™ HD 3870 or above) with at least 512 MB video memory. Some low-end integrated cards may not work.
Processor
Intel® Pentium® 4 CPU 3.00GHz or similar AMD Athlon 64
Sound Card
DirectX 9 Compatible Audio

Recomendados

OS
Windows Vista or newer
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
600 MB available space
Graphics
Direct3D 11 capable video card (NVIDIA® Geforce GTS 450 or AMD® Radeon™ HD 5670 or above) with at least 512 MB video memory. Low-end integrated and laptop cards are not recommended.
Processor
Core 2 Duo or similar AMD Athlon X2
Sound Card
DirectX 9 Compatible Audio

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Teyon
Distribuidora
Teyon
Fecha de lanzamiento
11 jul 2014

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Robot Rescue Revolution?

Robot Rescue Revolution está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Robot Rescue Revolution?

Robot Rescue Revolution se lanzó el 11 de julio de 2014.

¿Quién desarrolló Robot Rescue Revolution?

Robot Rescue Revolution fue desarrollado por Teyon.