Compara los precios de Sunshine Manor en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Fossil Games. Publicado por Hound Picked Games. Lanzado el 28/10/2021. Disponible en PC, Mac, Linux. Géneros: Action, Adventure, Indie.

A two-evening 8-bit horror adventure that earns its cozy-spooky charm through handcrafted pixel rooms, a quietly excellent soundtrack, and a demon-fighting kid who never stops being funny.

I have a soft spot for the kind of game that knows exactly what it is and refuses to apologize for it. Sunshine Manor sits right in that category: a top-down, isometric horror-adventure built in 8-bit pixel art, set in an 80s Halloween night, with a Faustian backstory involving a washed-up children's TV host named Mr. Aitken whose deal with a fortune teller ends, predictably, in a house full of blood and lingering spirits. You play as Ada, a kid with accidental psychic powers, and your job is to free four trapped ghosts by venturing into demon realms and defeating the bosses holding them. The structure is a rhythm of item hunts in the manor's real-world rooms, followed by plunges into parallel demon dimensions that each carry their own visual palette, enemies, and mechanical focus. One realm leans into chase sequences, another into platforming, another into something closer to point-and-click puzzle logic. Ada's toolkit is intentionally lean: a psychic burst that doubles as an attack and a dash, both tied to a single recharging stamina bar. That scarcity creates real tension in the demon lairs, where the Shadow Man can catch you off guard near doorways with very little warning. The bosses themselves are visually distinct and grotesquely cartoonish, and the writing around each ghost encounter lands with a lightness that the horror trappings never crush. Ada's sardonic commentary during interactions with demons is a genuine highlight. The art deserves proper attention. The pixel work is detailed at a level that rewards slow exploration: each dungeon runs on its own color palette and thematic logic, and the character sprites are expressive enough that the short cutscenes feel earned. The soundtrack is the real quiet triumph. The manor itself opens in near silence, creaking and hushed, which makes the demon-realm music hit harder when it arrives: head-bobbing 80s-style synth that shifts register completely from the surface-world tension. Fossil Games clearly has strong opinions about how sound should shape pacing, and that shows. Honestly, the criticisms are real and worth naming. The "horror RPG" label in the marketing oversells both the horror and the RPG. If you come expecting genuine scares or character progression mechanics, you will bounce. The game is short, landing somewhere in the three-to-five hour range depending on how lost you get. Save points are sparse and the lack of a map can make the manor's backtracking feel more repetitive than designed. A few soft-lock bugs were present at launch. And the dash being tied to the stamina gauge means you cannot simply sprint away from problems, which some players find frustrating and others find appropriately tense. The story's connective tissue is looser than it should be; the lore tapes that flesh out Aitken's backstory are easy to miss, and the link to Camp Sunshine is more thematic than narrative. But here is the thing: for players who want a short, handcrafted game that knows when to end, that wraps gore and humor in a pixel aesthetic without either canceling the other out, Sunshine Manor delivers on what actually matters. The 88% positive Steam rating from a small sample captures a genuine consensus. It is not trying to be Resident Evil in 8-bit. It is trying to be a well-made spooky evening with a weird, charming kid at the center of it. That it mostly succeeds is enough for me. Kai, Scout Team

Sunshine Manor

Sunshine Manor

28 oct 2021Fossil GamesHound Picked Games
GamerScout opina

A two-evening 8-bit horror adventure that earns its cozy-spooky charm through handcrafted pixel rooms, a quietly excellent soundtrack, and a demon-fighting kid who never stops being funny.

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I have a soft spot for the kind of game that knows exactly what it is and refuses to apologize for it. Sunshine Manor sits right in that category: a top-down, isometric horror-adventure built in 8-bit pixel art, set in an 80s Halloween night, with a Faustian backstory involving a washed-up children's TV host named Mr. Aitken whose deal with a fortune teller ends, predictably, in a house full of blood and lingering spirits. You play as Ada, a kid with accidental psychic powers, and your job is to free four trapped ghosts by venturing into demon realms and defeating the bosses holding them. The structure is a rhythm of item hunts in the manor's real-world rooms, followed by plunges into parallel demon dimensions that each carry their own visual palette, enemies, and mechanical focus. One realm leans into chase sequences, another into platforming, another into something closer to point-and-click puzzle logic. Ada's toolkit is intentionally lean: a psychic burst that doubles as an attack and a dash, both tied to a single recharging stamina bar. That scarcity creates real tension in the demon lairs, where the Shadow Man can catch you off guard near doorways with very little warning. The bosses themselves are visually distinct and grotesquely cartoonish, and the writing around each ghost encounter lands with a lightness that the horror trappings never crush. Ada's sardonic commentary during interactions with demons is a genuine highlight. The art deserves proper attention. The pixel work is detailed at a level that rewards slow exploration: each dungeon runs on its own color palette and thematic logic, and the character sprites are expressive enough that the short cutscenes feel earned. The soundtrack is the real quiet triumph. The manor itself opens in near silence, creaking and hushed, which makes the demon-realm music hit harder when it arrives: head-bobbing 80s-style synth that shifts register completely from the surface-world tension. Fossil Games clearly has strong opinions about how sound should shape pacing, and that shows. Honestly, the criticisms are real and worth naming. The "horror RPG" label in the marketing oversells both the horror and the RPG. If you come expecting genuine scares or character progression mechanics, you will bounce. The game is short, landing somewhere in the three-to-five hour range depending on how lost you get. Save points are sparse and the lack of a map can make the manor's backtracking feel more repetitive than designed. A few soft-lock bugs were present at launch. And the dash being tied to the stamina gauge means you cannot simply sprint away from problems, which some players find frustrating and others find appropriately tense. The story's connective tissue is looser than it should be; the lore tapes that flesh out Aitken's backstory are easy to miss, and the link to Camp Sunshine is more thematic than narrative. But here is the thing: for players who want a short, handcrafted game that knows when to end, that wraps gore and humor in a pixel aesthetic without either canceling the other out, Sunshine Manor delivers on what actually matters. The 88% positive Steam rating from a small sample captures a genuine consensus. It is not trying to be Resident Evil in 8-bit. It is trying to be a well-made spooky evening with a weird, charming kid at the center of it. That it mostly succeeds is enough for me.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayercontroller-supporttier:sub-5Cozy HorrorPsychic AbilitiesDemon RealmsBoss Variety80s AestheticIsometric ExplorationShort-FormPrequel

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 10
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
500 MB available space
Graphics
512 MB NVidia or ATI graphics card
Processor
2.0 GHz Intel or AMD Processor

Recomendados

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
500 MB available space
Graphics
2 GB NVidia or ATI graphics card
Processor
2.4GHz Intel or AMD Processor

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Fossil Games
Distribuidora
Hound Picked Games
Fecha de lanzamiento
28 oct 2021

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Sunshine Manor?

Sunshine Manor está disponible en PC, Mac, Linux.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Sunshine Manor?

Sunshine Manor se lanzó el 28 de octubre de 2021.

¿Quién desarrolló Sunshine Manor?

Sunshine Manor fue desarrollado por Fossil Games y publicado por Hound Picked Games.