Compara los precios de Stardust Vanguards en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Zanrai Interactive. Publicado por Zanrai Interactive. Lanzado el 30/1/2015. Disponible en PC, Linux. Géneros: Action, Casual, Indie.

Four controllers, one couch, and a random pirate ambush that might cost everyone the match - Stardust Vanguards is a tight local brawler that lives or dies by your social calendar.

My first honest reaction to Stardust Vanguards was mild frustration - not at the game, but at my own situation. It took about thirty seconds to clock that this thing has zero online functionality, no bots, and genuinely needs bodies in the same room to reach its potential. If you can clear that hurdle, there is a scrappy, well-built couch fighter underneath. If you cannot, stop reading and move on. The mechanical loop is leaner than it looks on paper. Each player pilots a mech suit and gets four tools to work with: a sword strike, a laser gun with limited ammo, a dash that punishes overuse with a nasty cooldown, and a shield. The sword can deflect incoming bullets, which opens up a small read-and-react layer that stops the whole thing from just being a bumper-car brawl. You earn reinforcement points by eliminating enemies, then spend them to call in NPC ship squadrons that fly interference for you. On top of all that, a random event system drops pirate fleets into the arena mid-match. Those pirates will happily ignore all player alliances and go for the win themselves, forcing split-second decisions about whether to team up with your enemies or gamble on the distraction. That chaos engine is genuinely the game's best idea and the thing that keeps each round feeling different. Mode variety is decent for a game this small. Deathmatch and Team Battles are the bread and butter, but Space Ball - a soccer-style capture the flag hybrid where you shove the objective around with sword swings and body-blocks - is the surprise standout. Conquest (king of the hill) rounds out the competitive side. Cooperative mode runs up to four players through wave survival across thirteen arenas, each with its own environmental wrinkle: rotating stages, meteorite hazards, blockade mazes. Difficulty scales up to a locked endurance mode, which gives regulars something to chase. Custom match options let you flip on infinite ammo, swords-only, and pirate frequency sliders, so you can tune the madness to your group. The complaints that follow the game around are legitimate. The four playable factions - Emerald Coalition, Scarlet Kingdom, Azure Singularity, and Amber Federation - are cosmetically distinct and mechanically identical. No weapon variation, no character-specific moves. Controls have been described as sluggish in multiple reviews and that is not entirely unfair; the dash feels weighty rather than snappy, which goes against what you want from a fast read-and-react arena game. Fatigue sets in faster than it should. The reinforcement system adds genuine depth but it is easy to miss entirely if nobody reads the how-to-play screen. And without online support, your long-term play count is going to be dictated entirely by how often you have three other people on your sofa. The pixel art and soundtrack are genuinely strong. The announcer work in particular punches well above the budget level and gives the whole package an authentic anime-arcade energy that holds up. Steam user sentiment sits at around 81 percent positive across a small sample, which tracks - people who bought it for the right reasons tend to like it, people who hoped it would work as a solo or online game did not. Bottom line: if you regularly host game nights and want something that generates actual shouting, Stardust Vanguards earns its spot in the rotation. If your friends are mostly online and not local, this is a hard pass. Fred, Scout Team

Stardust Vanguards

Stardust Vanguards

30 ene 2015Zanrai Interactive
GamerScout opina

Four controllers, one couch, and a random pirate ambush that might cost everyone the match - Stardust Vanguards is a tight local brawler that lives or dies by your social calendar.

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Mínimo histórico: €0.39

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My first honest reaction to Stardust Vanguards was mild frustration - not at the game, but at my own situation. It took about thirty seconds to clock that this thing has zero online functionality, no bots, and genuinely needs bodies in the same room to reach its potential. If you can clear that hurdle, there is a scrappy, well-built couch fighter underneath. If you cannot, stop reading and move on. The mechanical loop is leaner than it looks on paper. Each player pilots a mech suit and gets four tools to work with: a sword strike, a laser gun with limited ammo, a dash that punishes overuse with a nasty cooldown, and a shield. The sword can deflect incoming bullets, which opens up a small read-and-react layer that stops the whole thing from just being a bumper-car brawl. You earn reinforcement points by eliminating enemies, then spend them to call in NPC ship squadrons that fly interference for you. On top of all that, a random event system drops pirate fleets into the arena mid-match. Those pirates will happily ignore all player alliances and go for the win themselves, forcing split-second decisions about whether to team up with your enemies or gamble on the distraction. That chaos engine is genuinely the game's best idea and the thing that keeps each round feeling different. Mode variety is decent for a game this small. Deathmatch and Team Battles are the bread and butter, but Space Ball - a soccer-style capture the flag hybrid where you shove the objective around with sword swings and body-blocks - is the surprise standout. Conquest (king of the hill) rounds out the competitive side. Cooperative mode runs up to four players through wave survival across thirteen arenas, each with its own environmental wrinkle: rotating stages, meteorite hazards, blockade mazes. Difficulty scales up to a locked endurance mode, which gives regulars something to chase. Custom match options let you flip on infinite ammo, swords-only, and pirate frequency sliders, so you can tune the madness to your group. The complaints that follow the game around are legitimate. The four playable factions - Emerald Coalition, Scarlet Kingdom, Azure Singularity, and Amber Federation - are cosmetically distinct and mechanically identical. No weapon variation, no character-specific moves. Controls have been described as sluggish in multiple reviews and that is not entirely unfair; the dash feels weighty rather than snappy, which goes against what you want from a fast read-and-react arena game. Fatigue sets in faster than it should. The reinforcement system adds genuine depth but it is easy to miss entirely if nobody reads the how-to-play screen. And without online support, your long-term play count is going to be dictated entirely by how often you have three other people on your sofa. The pixel art and soundtrack are genuinely strong. The announcer work in particular punches well above the budget level and gives the whole package an authentic anime-arcade energy that holds up. Steam user sentiment sits at around 81 percent positive across a small sample, which tracks - people who bought it for the right reasons tend to like it, people who hoped it would work as a solo or online game did not. Bottom line: if you regularly host game nights and want something that generates actual shouting, Stardust Vanguards earns its spot in the rotation. If your friends are mostly online and not local, this is a hard pass.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

Shooters

Etiquetas

multiplayerpvplocal-multiplayerlocal-coopachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardstier:sub-5Couch BrawlerNPC ReinforcementsRandom Event SystemSword DeflectionWave SurvivalCustom Match RulesAnime AestheticShared ScreenMech Combat

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 7 or higher
Memory
512 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
Shader Model 2.0 Support (generally anything newer than 2004)
Processor
1.5 GhZ (w/ SSE2 instruction set support)

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Zanrai Interactive
Distribuidora
Zanrai Interactive
Fecha de lanzamiento
30 ene 2015

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Stardust Vanguards?

Stardust Vanguards está disponible en PC, Linux.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Stardust Vanguards?

Stardust Vanguards se lanzó el 30 de enero de 2015.

¿Quién desarrolló Stardust Vanguards?

Stardust Vanguards fue desarrollado por Zanrai Interactive.