Compara los precios de SMIB: Mission Cure en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Virtual Arts Studio. Publicado por Virtual Arts Studio. Lanzado el 19/11/2020. Disponible en PC, Mac. Géneros: Casual, Indie, Early Access.

A quiet, thoughtful robot-programming puzzler that rewards the methodical planner type - just know the camera will test your patience before the puzzles do.

I have a soft spot for games that ask you to slow down and think in sequences rather than react in milliseconds, which is exactly why SMIB: Mission Cure caught my attention from a tiny developer's page with almost no coverage. The central idea is genuinely lovely: you are a retired operator, pulled back into service to remotely guide a small voxel robot named SMIB across alien planets, one carefully pre-programmed route at a time. There are no real-time inputs. You place commands - turn left, turn right, jump, push an object, shoot a laser - along SMIB's projected path during a planning phase, then press play and watch your logic either succeed or quietly unravel. The mechanical constraint that gives the whole thing its tension is the eight-command battery limit per turn. SMIB can only execute eight instructions before it needs to reach a recharge station, which means each level becomes a two-part problem: first, can you reach the intermediate recharge at all, and second, can you then chain a second sequence all the way to the exit? When this clicks, the satisfaction is real. The voxel art style adds genuine warmth - decorative fish, carved statues, little ambient touches that communicate a developer who cares about the spaces they build. Each planet carries its own visual personality, and the planned scope of at least three planets across 36 levels gives the game room to expand its palette. That said, SMIB: Mission Cure is still in Early Access, and the seams show in a few specific, frustrating ways. The isometric 3D camera is the biggest recurring offender. Upper floors frequently block sight lines to lower tiles, making it genuinely difficult to place commands accurately - a problem compounded by the fact that clicking the wrong tile while adjusting your view is easy to do. Community feedback has flagged this persistently, along with uneven audio mixing that can catch you off guard. SMIB itself also moves slowly during the execution phase, which is charming on a first attempt but becomes a minor ordeal when you are iterating through a hard level for the sixth or seventh time. There is no hint system and no option to skip a level if you get stuck, which means the patience bar is load-bearing. What keeps me in the game's corner is the quality-of-life decision to preserve your previously placed commands after a failed run. You do not start from a blank slate every time; you can review and tweak what you already built, which respects your time in a way that matters. The premise is sweet without being saccharine, the puzzle logic is sound, and the handcrafted feel of each small level area is consistent with a studio that takes its craft seriously. If Virtual Arts Studio addresses the camera obstruction, adds a speed toggle for the execution phase, and ideally introduces a hint or skip system, this could become a quietly essential entry in the robot-programming puzzle genre alongside Robo Rally-style board game conversions. For right now, in Early Access, it sits in a honest middle ground: charming, occasionally maddening, and best approached by players who genuinely enjoy deliberate, plan-first puzzle design and can forgive a rough camera for the sake of a good idea with real heart behind it. Kai, Scout Team

SMIB: Mission Cure
CasualIndieEarly Access

SMIB: Mission Cure

19 nov 2020Virtual Arts Studio
GamerScout opina

A quiet, thoughtful robot-programming puzzler that rewards the methodical planner type - just know the camera will test your patience before the puzzles do.

PCMac
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Acerca de SMIB: Mission Cure

I have a soft spot for games that ask you to slow down and think in sequences rather than react in milliseconds, which is exactly why SMIB: Mission Cure caught my attention from a tiny developer's page with almost no coverage. The central idea is genuinely lovely: you are a retired operator, pulled back into service to remotely guide a small voxel robot named SMIB across alien planets, one carefully pre-programmed route at a time. There are no real-time inputs. You place commands - turn left, turn right, jump, push an object, shoot a laser - along SMIB's projected path during a planning phase, then press play and watch your logic either succeed or quietly unravel. The mechanical constraint that gives the whole thing its tension is the eight-command battery limit per turn. SMIB can only execute eight instructions before it needs to reach a recharge station, which means each level becomes a two-part problem: first, can you reach the intermediate recharge at all, and second, can you then chain a second sequence all the way to the exit? When this clicks, the satisfaction is real. The voxel art style adds genuine warmth - decorative fish, carved statues, little ambient touches that communicate a developer who cares about the spaces they build. Each planet carries its own visual personality, and the planned scope of at least three planets across 36 levels gives the game room to expand its palette. That said, SMIB: Mission Cure is still in Early Access, and the seams show in a few specific, frustrating ways. The isometric 3D camera is the biggest recurring offender. Upper floors frequently block sight lines to lower tiles, making it genuinely difficult to place commands accurately - a problem compounded by the fact that clicking the wrong tile while adjusting your view is easy to do. Community feedback has flagged this persistently, along with uneven audio mixing that can catch you off guard. SMIB itself also moves slowly during the execution phase, which is charming on a first attempt but becomes a minor ordeal when you are iterating through a hard level for the sixth or seventh time. There is no hint system and no option to skip a level if you get stuck, which means the patience bar is load-bearing. What keeps me in the game's corner is the quality-of-life decision to preserve your previously placed commands after a failed run. You do not start from a blank slate every time; you can review and tweak what you already built, which respects your time in a way that matters. The premise is sweet without being saccharine, the puzzle logic is sound, and the handcrafted feel of each small level area is consistent with a studio that takes its craft seriously. If Virtual Arts Studio addresses the camera obstruction, adds a speed toggle for the execution phase, and ideally introduces a hint or skip system, this could become a quietly essential entry in the robot-programming puzzle genre alongside Robo Rally-style board game conversions. For right now, in Early Access, it sits in a honest middle ground: charming, occasionally maddening, and best approached by players who genuinely enjoy deliberate, plan-first puzzle design and can forgive a rough camera for the sake of a good idea with real heart behind it.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Robot ProgrammingPlan-Execute LoopVoxel ArtBattery ManagementIsometric PuzzleTurn-Based LogicFamily-AccessibleNo Hint SystemEarly Access Caveat

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 7
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
300 MB available space
Graphics
Integrated Graphics
Processor
2 Ghz Dual Core
Sound Card
Any

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Virtual Arts Studio
Distribuidora
Virtual Arts Studio
Fecha de lanzamiento
19 nov 2020

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible SMIB: Mission Cure?

SMIB: Mission Cure está disponible en PC, Mac.

¿Cuándo se lanzó SMIB: Mission Cure?

SMIB: Mission Cure se lanzó el 19 de noviembre de 2020.

¿Quién desarrolló SMIB: Mission Cure?

SMIB: Mission Cure fue desarrollado por Virtual Arts Studio.