Compara los precios de The Sun at Night en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Minicore Studios. Publicado por Minicore Studios. Lanzado el 1/8/2014. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Action, Adventure, Indie. Puntuación Metacritic: 59/100.

A Metroidvania built around one of history's saddest real animals, with art and world-building that outrun the combat holding it back. Worth it for the concept alone, if you read every journal entry.

My first impression of The Sun at Night was something close to quiet wonder: a cyborg space dog crash-lands in a Soviet-dominated alternate Earth, joins a resistance, and starts asking questions that actual history never got to answer. That premise alone is doing heavy lifting, and for a while it carries the game further than its mechanics probably deserve. The world Minicore Studios constructed is genuinely strange and specific. America is ash. Stalin rolled across Europe. The Soviets power their war machine on mysterious new energy sources, and their scientists have been busy welding laser arrays onto bears. Laika, returned from orbit with a hexagonal shield and a growing arsenal, becomes the resistance's best weapon almost by accident. The lore is delivered almost entirely through scattered notes, diaries, personal letters, and computer terminals tucked into every corner of the branching levels, and if you are the kind of player who reads everything, the picture that assembles itself is dark and surprisingly moving. If you skip the text, the plot dissolves into noise. The platforming and combat sit somewhere between a Metroid-style run-and-gunner and something trying very hard to be Deus Ex. Laika can equip a shotgun, laser beam, and machine gun, and a Nano Battery upgrade system lets you build toward raw offense, high defense, or a shield-reflect playstyle where enemy fire gets turned back on them. On paper that is a satisfying kit. In practice, the feedback is thin: weapons feel weightless, boss kills land without ceremony, and the hacking minigame (stop a moving bar inside a target zone) is closer to a loading screen than a challenge. Save points are fixed and spread far enough apart that a bad death or a rare crash means replaying five to ten minutes of ground you already covered. The health-warning system, a blinking bar and a sound cue, is easy to miss mid-fight. The difficulty is not punishing so much as quietly punishing you for trusting the interface. What keeps pulling me back to The Sun at Night is everything outside the shooting. The hand-drawn character art for the animal-robot hybrids sits in an uncomfortable zone between sympathetic and unsettling, exactly the right register for this story. The electronic score consistently hits emotional notes that the level design misses entirely, especially in the opening sequence where the yearning in the music makes the worldbuilding feel bigger than it actually is. This is a game where the mood and the soundtrack are doing the narrative work that the cutscenes occasionally fumble. At a Metacritic of 59 and with a price that reflects its age and obscurity, the calculus is simpler than the reviews suggest. If you love alternate history with genuine philosophical weight, do not mind lore-hunting, and can forgive platformers that feel slightly disconnected from their own action, there is something here that most players walked past in 2014 and never found. Just know going in that the first part of a planned trilogy never grew into parts two and three, so the story ends mid-arc. For the right person, that unfinished thread is haunting in exactly the way the game intends. Kai, Scout Team

The Sun at Night

The Sun at Night

1 ago 2014Minicore Studios
GamerScout opina

A Metroidvania built around one of history's saddest real animals, with art and world-building that outrun the combat holding it back. Worth it for the concept alone, if you read every journal entry.

PC
ProtonDB Bronze
Mejor precio disponible
€0.00
en N/A
Mínimo histórico: €2.40

Comparar precios(0 tiendas)

Cargando precios...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Historial de precios

Historical low
€2.405 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€2.21€2.34€2.46€2.595 Jun11 Jun17 Jun22 Jun28 Jun
Tracking prices since 5 Jun 2026
Create alert

Capturas y multimedia

Acerca de The Sun at Night

My first impression of The Sun at Night was something close to quiet wonder: a cyborg space dog crash-lands in a Soviet-dominated alternate Earth, joins a resistance, and starts asking questions that actual history never got to answer. That premise alone is doing heavy lifting, and for a while it carries the game further than its mechanics probably deserve. The world Minicore Studios constructed is genuinely strange and specific. America is ash. Stalin rolled across Europe. The Soviets power their war machine on mysterious new energy sources, and their scientists have been busy welding laser arrays onto bears. Laika, returned from orbit with a hexagonal shield and a growing arsenal, becomes the resistance's best weapon almost by accident. The lore is delivered almost entirely through scattered notes, diaries, personal letters, and computer terminals tucked into every corner of the branching levels, and if you are the kind of player who reads everything, the picture that assembles itself is dark and surprisingly moving. If you skip the text, the plot dissolves into noise. The platforming and combat sit somewhere between a Metroid-style run-and-gunner and something trying very hard to be Deus Ex. Laika can equip a shotgun, laser beam, and machine gun, and a Nano Battery upgrade system lets you build toward raw offense, high defense, or a shield-reflect playstyle where enemy fire gets turned back on them. On paper that is a satisfying kit. In practice, the feedback is thin: weapons feel weightless, boss kills land without ceremony, and the hacking minigame (stop a moving bar inside a target zone) is closer to a loading screen than a challenge. Save points are fixed and spread far enough apart that a bad death or a rare crash means replaying five to ten minutes of ground you already covered. The health-warning system, a blinking bar and a sound cue, is easy to miss mid-fight. The difficulty is not punishing so much as quietly punishing you for trusting the interface. What keeps pulling me back to The Sun at Night is everything outside the shooting. The hand-drawn character art for the animal-robot hybrids sits in an uncomfortable zone between sympathetic and unsettling, exactly the right register for this story. The electronic score consistently hits emotional notes that the level design misses entirely, especially in the opening sequence where the yearning in the music makes the worldbuilding feel bigger than it actually is. This is a game where the mood and the soundtrack are doing the narrative work that the cutscenes occasionally fumble. At a Metacritic of 59 and with a price that reflects its age and obscurity, the calculus is simpler than the reviews suggest. If you love alternate history with genuine philosophical weight, do not mind lore-hunting, and can forgive platformers that feel slightly disconnected from their own action, there is something here that most players walked past in 2014 and never found. Just know going in that the first part of a planned trilogy never grew into parts two and three, so the story ends mid-arc. For the right person, that unfinished thread is haunting in exactly the way the game intends.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardstier:sub-5MetroidvaniaAlt-HistoryLore-HeavySkill TreeShield MechanicNarrative-DrivenCyberpunk AnimalsWeapon UpgradesSingle-Episode Arc

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 7
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
AMD M880G with ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4200
Processor
AMD Turion II Dual-Core Mobiel M500 2.20 GHz

Recomendados

OS
Windows 7/8
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
nVIDIA GeForce GT 520 4GB
Processor
3.3 GHz FX-Series Six-Core FX-6100

Sigue explorando

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on The Sun at Night.

Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
59

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Minicore Studios
Distribuidora
Minicore Studios
Fecha de lanzamiento
1 ago 2014

Alerta de precio

¡Recibe un aviso cuando el precio baje de tu objetivo!

Crear alerta

Compra mejor: guías útiles

Preguntas frecuentes sobre The Sun at Night

¿Cuánto cuesta The Sun at Night?

El precio de The Sun at Night cambia a menudo y varía según la tienda, la edición y la región. La tabla de precios en vivo de esta página compara las ofertas más baratas en stock de tiendas de claves de confianza como Eneba y Kinguin, para que siempre veas el precio más bajo actual antes de comprar.

¿Dónde puedo comprar The Sun at Night más barato?

Compara los precios de The Sun at Night en todas las tiendas verificadas en la tabla de precios de esta página. Listamos las ofertas de claves y tiendas más baratas en stock, actualizadas con frecuencia, para que siempre veas la mejor oferta actual antes de comprar.

¿En qué plataformas está disponible The Sun at Night?

The Sun at Night está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó The Sun at Night?

The Sun at Night se lanzó el 1 de agosto de 2014.

¿Quién desarrolló The Sun at Night?

The Sun at Night fue desarrollado por Minicore Studios.

¿Merece la pena comprar The Sun at Night?

The Sun at Night tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 59/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Action. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.