Compara los precios de Solar Shifter EX en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Elder Games. Publicado por Headup. Lanzado el 11/9/2015. Disponible en PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox. Géneros: Action, Indie.

A one-man shmup built around a genuinely clever teleport mechanic that the rest of the game never bothers to support. Worth knowing about before you spend anything on it.

I wanted Solar Shifter EX to win. It comes from a solo developer, it has a real hook, and the environments across its 18 missions have an honest visual charm to them. Watching your Phase Shifter tear through alien cityscapes and orbit-lit planet surfaces genuinely feels like something. The teleport mechanic at its centre, where you snap your ship across four fixed screen positions using the right stick, is the kind of one-sentence pitch that should anchor a whole game. On bosses that sweep beam lasers across the screen, it momentarily clicks into place and you feel the designer's intent. That moment is real. The rest of the game spends its runtime diluting it. The structural problems stack quickly. The shift mechanic is supposed to be your primary survival tool, but the optimal strategy that most players eventually land on is to find a safe corner, park there, and hold fire. Enemy formations do not aim at you so much as run fixed patterns so dense that dodging them actively invites more punishment than staying still. The credit-based weapon upgrade system, where you collect drops from kills and spend them at end-of-level hangars, sounds interesting on paper, but the power gains are marginal enough that most players report barely noticing the difference before and after spending. There is no traditional scoring system either, which strips out the loop that veteran shmup players use to pace themselves and set personal targets. The game also offers four controllable ships, including three alien craft you gain access to mid-run, but the swap-in moments feel unexplained and short-lived rather than strategically designed. The technical side does the game no favours. The camera rotates and pulls back to cinematic angles during transitions between sections, and while the intent to give the thing a filmic feel is clear, it repeatedly creates moments where your spatial positioning becomes genuinely ambiguous. The slightly angled perspective, rather than a clean top-down view, makes lining up shots inconsistently frustrating. On PC the framerate can fluctuate even on reasonably capable hardware, and the load times after each death, in a genre where dying fast is the whole rhythm, break the flow in a way that accumulates badly across a session. The in-game soundtrack has energy but loops without reacting to boss encounters or level intensity, flattening the tension it should be amplifying. For absolute completionists of the bullet-hell shmup niche who have cleared everything else and want to assess a flawed experiment, there is a curiosity here. The teleport idea genuinely deserved a better-designed game around it, and the visual direction has moments that suggest the developer cared. But the Steam community has settled on a mixed verdict with less than half of user reviews positive, and the critical consensus across multiple outlets points consistently at the same problems: controls that undermine the core mechanic, a camera that confuses more than it impresses, and an upgrade loop that never meaningfully pays off. Genre newcomers should start elsewhere. Genre veterans will know within two missions whether the rough edges are the kind they can forgive. Kai, Scout Team

Solar Shifter EX

Solar Shifter EX

11 sept 2015Elder GamesHeadup
GamerScout opina

A one-man shmup built around a genuinely clever teleport mechanic that the rest of the game never bothers to support. Worth knowing about before you spend anything on it.

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Mínimo histórico: €0.27

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I wanted Solar Shifter EX to win. It comes from a solo developer, it has a real hook, and the environments across its 18 missions have an honest visual charm to them. Watching your Phase Shifter tear through alien cityscapes and orbit-lit planet surfaces genuinely feels like something. The teleport mechanic at its centre, where you snap your ship across four fixed screen positions using the right stick, is the kind of one-sentence pitch that should anchor a whole game. On bosses that sweep beam lasers across the screen, it momentarily clicks into place and you feel the designer's intent. That moment is real. The rest of the game spends its runtime diluting it. The structural problems stack quickly. The shift mechanic is supposed to be your primary survival tool, but the optimal strategy that most players eventually land on is to find a safe corner, park there, and hold fire. Enemy formations do not aim at you so much as run fixed patterns so dense that dodging them actively invites more punishment than staying still. The credit-based weapon upgrade system, where you collect drops from kills and spend them at end-of-level hangars, sounds interesting on paper, but the power gains are marginal enough that most players report barely noticing the difference before and after spending. There is no traditional scoring system either, which strips out the loop that veteran shmup players use to pace themselves and set personal targets. The game also offers four controllable ships, including three alien craft you gain access to mid-run, but the swap-in moments feel unexplained and short-lived rather than strategically designed. The technical side does the game no favours. The camera rotates and pulls back to cinematic angles during transitions between sections, and while the intent to give the thing a filmic feel is clear, it repeatedly creates moments where your spatial positioning becomes genuinely ambiguous. The slightly angled perspective, rather than a clean top-down view, makes lining up shots inconsistently frustrating. On PC the framerate can fluctuate even on reasonably capable hardware, and the load times after each death, in a genre where dying fast is the whole rhythm, break the flow in a way that accumulates badly across a session. The in-game soundtrack has energy but loops without reacting to boss encounters or level intensity, flattening the tension it should be amplifying. For absolute completionists of the bullet-hell shmup niche who have cleared everything else and want to assess a flawed experiment, there is a curiosity here. The teleport idea genuinely deserved a better-designed game around it, and the visual direction has moments that suggest the developer cared. But the Steam community has settled on a mixed verdict with less than half of user reviews positive, and the critical consensus across multiple outlets points consistently at the same problems: controls that undermine the core mechanic, a camera that confuses more than it impresses, and an upgrade loop that never meaningfully pays off. Genre newcomers should start elsewhere. Genre veterans will know within two missions whether the rough edges are the kind they can forgive.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardstier:indieBullet HellVertical Scrolling ShooterTeleport MechanicSpace CombatOne-Man StudioCredit UpgradesCinematic CameraMixed Reception

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows Vista / 7 / 8 / 10
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
nVidia GeForce 8600 GT / ATI 2600 Pro
Processor
2Ghz single core
Sound Card
Any

Recomendados

OS
Windows Vista / 7 / 8 / 10
Memory
3 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
nVidia GeForce GTX 275 / ATI Radeon 4770 (or higher)
Processor
2Ghz dual core
Sound Card
Any

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Elder Games
Distribuidora
Headup
Fecha de lanzamiento
11 sept 2015

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Solar Shifter EX?

Solar Shifter EX está disponible en PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Solar Shifter EX?

Solar Shifter EX se lanzó el 11 de septiembre de 2015.

¿Quién desarrolló Solar Shifter EX?

Solar Shifter EX fue desarrollado por Elder Games y publicado por Headup.