Compara los precios de Sacre Bleu en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Hildring Studio Inc. Publicado por Noodlecake. Lanzado el 17/4/2025. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie.

If you have ever wanted to propel yourself through spike-filled French dungeons using a steam-powered blunderbuss in slow motion, Hildring Studio built that game - and it mostly earns the absurd premise.

My first thought watching Sacre Bleu in motion was that solo developer Stein Loetveit had done something genuinely rare: built a single mechanic so satisfying that the whole game earns its runtime just by leaning into it. That mechanic is the blunderbuss - a steam-powered musket whose recoil flings your musketeer captain through the air while time slows to let you aim the next shot. You get three bursts before you have to touch solid ground to reload, which turns every platforming section into a little midair puzzle. Do you spend two shots gaining altitude and save one for a sideways dash to dodge the spinning cog? Do you chain all three horizontally to clear a long gap at speed? The system asks you to think in three dimensions while moving fast, and once it clicks it feels absolutely brilliant. The rest of the combat toolkit supports that core idea well. Sword slashes handle close-range crowds, a pistol covers distance, bombs clear tight clusters, and the blunderbuss itself can deflect incoming arrows and enemy bombs straight back at the source. Levels are divided into alternating sections - platforming mazes filled with hazards, then contained combat arenas where you are graded on kill variety, time, and deaths. The grading system rewards creativity: stringing together sword kills, throws, deflections, and bomb detonations earns better scores and unlocks tougher optional challenges. The platforming sections are where the game sings. The combat arenas are competent but noticeably shallower - enemy variety is limited, and the grading criteria is not always well communicated, which makes chasing high scores feel more mysterious than motivating. Presentation is a genuine highlight. Each area of the Bastille has its own visual identity, from open Parisian rooftops to steaming kitchen machinery staffed by robot chefs. The art direction is cartoony and hand-crafted, with grotesque zombie boss designs that lean cheerfully into the absurdity of the premise. The music shifts register well - light and whimsical in exploration, more driving and urgent during timed escape sequences. Voice acting is rendered as Banjo-style gibberish that somehow manages to sound vaguely French, which is exactly the right call for a game this silly. On the downside, the camera is inconsistent, sometimes pulling in too tight during complex multi-shot sequences and occasionally drifting too far out to track your character cleanly. Hitbox reliability was also flagged in early coverage as a friction point, producing occasional deaths that feel earned by the level geometry rather than the player. At roughly six hours for a single clear, Sacre Bleu knows its length - and for the most part respects it. The story is thin: falsely imprisoned musketeer escapes with the help of scientist Josephine, uncovers a conspiracy, fights zombie aristocrats. It does the job of moving you from zone to zone without demanding that you care. If you are here for narrative, you will find it threadbare. If you are here to solve the game's movement puzzles faster and cleaner on each replay, there is real depth waiting in the per-level leaderboards, unlockable modifiers, and hidden secrets tucked into the stages. The game also includes a Twitch integration mode where viewers can trigger modifiers mid-run - a smart fit for a speedrun-adjacent game with this much visual chaos potential. Controller is strongly recommended; mouse and keyboard works but the default layout needs remapping before it feels natural. Kai, Scout Team

Sacre Bleu

Sacre Bleu

17 abr 2025Hildring Studio IncNoodlecake
GamerScout opina

If you have ever wanted to propel yourself through spike-filled French dungeons using a steam-powered blunderbuss in slow motion, Hildring Studio built that game - and it mostly earns the absurd premise.

PC
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum
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Mínimo histórico: €6.59

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Acerca de Sacre Bleu

My first thought watching Sacre Bleu in motion was that solo developer Stein Loetveit had done something genuinely rare: built a single mechanic so satisfying that the whole game earns its runtime just by leaning into it. That mechanic is the blunderbuss - a steam-powered musket whose recoil flings your musketeer captain through the air while time slows to let you aim the next shot. You get three bursts before you have to touch solid ground to reload, which turns every platforming section into a little midair puzzle. Do you spend two shots gaining altitude and save one for a sideways dash to dodge the spinning cog? Do you chain all three horizontally to clear a long gap at speed? The system asks you to think in three dimensions while moving fast, and once it clicks it feels absolutely brilliant. The rest of the combat toolkit supports that core idea well. Sword slashes handle close-range crowds, a pistol covers distance, bombs clear tight clusters, and the blunderbuss itself can deflect incoming arrows and enemy bombs straight back at the source. Levels are divided into alternating sections - platforming mazes filled with hazards, then contained combat arenas where you are graded on kill variety, time, and deaths. The grading system rewards creativity: stringing together sword kills, throws, deflections, and bomb detonations earns better scores and unlocks tougher optional challenges. The platforming sections are where the game sings. The combat arenas are competent but noticeably shallower - enemy variety is limited, and the grading criteria is not always well communicated, which makes chasing high scores feel more mysterious than motivating. Presentation is a genuine highlight. Each area of the Bastille has its own visual identity, from open Parisian rooftops to steaming kitchen machinery staffed by robot chefs. The art direction is cartoony and hand-crafted, with grotesque zombie boss designs that lean cheerfully into the absurdity of the premise. The music shifts register well - light and whimsical in exploration, more driving and urgent during timed escape sequences. Voice acting is rendered as Banjo-style gibberish that somehow manages to sound vaguely French, which is exactly the right call for a game this silly. On the downside, the camera is inconsistent, sometimes pulling in too tight during complex multi-shot sequences and occasionally drifting too far out to track your character cleanly. Hitbox reliability was also flagged in early coverage as a friction point, producing occasional deaths that feel earned by the level geometry rather than the player. At roughly six hours for a single clear, Sacre Bleu knows its length - and for the most part respects it. The story is thin: falsely imprisoned musketeer escapes with the help of scientist Josephine, uncovers a conspiracy, fights zombie aristocrats. It does the job of moving you from zone to zone without demanding that you care. If you are here for narrative, you will find it threadbare. If you are here to solve the game's movement puzzles faster and cleaner on each replay, there is real depth waiting in the per-level leaderboards, unlockable modifiers, and hidden secrets tucked into the stages. The game also includes a Twitch integration mode where viewers can trigger modifiers mid-run - a smart fit for a speedrun-adjacent game with this much visual chaos potential. Controller is strongly recommended; mouse and keyboard works but the default layout needs remapping before it feels natural.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:indieBullet-Time MovementBlunderbuss PropulsionCombat GradingSpeedrun LeaderboardsTwitch IntegrationZombie BossesScore AttackAccessibility OptionsSteampunk France

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Win 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
NVidia GeForce GTX 780 / AMD Radeon RX 470
Processor
Intel Core i5-2500K / AMD FX-6350

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OS
Win 10
Memory
16 GB RAM
Graphics
NVidia GeForce GTX 1070 Ti / AMD Radeon RX Vega 56
Processor
Intel Core i5-8400 / AMD Ryzen 5 2600

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Hildring Studio Inc
Distribuidora
Noodlecake
Fecha de lanzamiento
17 abr 2025

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Sacre Bleu?

Sacre Bleu está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Sacre Bleu?

Sacre Bleu se lanzó el 17 de abril de 2025.

¿Quién desarrolló Sacre Bleu?

Sacre Bleu fue desarrollado por Hildring Studio Inc y publicado por Noodlecake.