Compara los precios de Tribal Pass en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Tribe Tea. Publicado por Stas Shostak. Lanzado el 26/8/2016. Disponible en PC, Mac, Linux. Géneros: Action, Adventure, Indie.

Managing a prehistoric tribe while sprinting through procedurally-generated chaos is a wilder premise than it sounds, and Tribal Pass earns its oddness honestly.

I want to put a number on how many times I sacrificed a tribesman to buy the rest of the group three more seconds of survival, and I genuinely lost count. Tribal Pass is a top-down runner from indie developer Tribe Tea where you shepherd a band of prehistoric survivors through an unrelenting scroll of biomes, rivers, saber-tooth encounters, hostile rival tribes, quicksand, night-darkness, and pterodactyls, all without ever hitting pause. The pitch is genuinely strange and the execution is, at its best, completely gripping. The core mechanic asks you to split your group on the fly into two, three, or four sub-formations to dodge hazards that would wipe a clustered mob in one hit. While you're doing that, you also have to monitor the food supply, pick up weapons scattered across the terrain, hunt for meat, and gather berries before starvation forces a bleaker choice: cannibalism. Yes, there is a dedicated cannibalise button. It is both horrifying and funny, and it is absolutely a legitimate survival tool. The procedurally-built runs mean no two sessions play identically, and the pixel art carries a genuinely atmospheric, neolithic weight to it, with the original soundtrack by Ruslan Viter pounding underneath in a way that feels ceremonial rather than frantic. Here is where I need to be honest with you, though. Tribal Pass has a steep and poorly-explained learning curve. The line between a threat that kills you and a threat your tribe can absorb is not communicated clearly, and reading the terrain at speed is harder than it should be, especially during night segments where contrast nearly disappears. The game asks for a lot of muscle memory before it pays anything back, and the reward loop is thin. There is no meaningful progression system between runs, no relics to carry forward, and the token economy that unlocks small bonuses does not create a strong pull to retry. Players who need visible progress to stay motivated will bounce off this hard. For a specific kind of player, though, this small oddity from 2016 earns genuine affection. If you like the idea of Oregon Trail redesigned as a reflex game, if you tolerate opaque difficulty spikes the way a genre historian tolerates bad UI, if you find procedural runs rewarding on their own terms, Tribal Pass has a handcrafted personality that bigger runner games simply do not bother with. The Steam community has built guides on animal encounters, the OST is separately available for a reason, and the first playable prototype from 2013 is packaged as a bonus. This is a game made by people who cared deeply about a strange idea. Whether it fully works is the honest question, and the answer is: about 74 percent of the time. Kai, Scout Team

Tribal Pass

Tribal Pass

26 ago 2016Tribe TeaStas Shostak
GamerScout opina

Managing a prehistoric tribe while sprinting through procedurally-generated chaos is a wilder premise than it sounds, and Tribal Pass earns its oddness honestly.

PCMacLinux
Steam Deck Playable
Mejor precio disponible
€0.00
en N/A
Mínimo histórico: €0.91

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
€0.917 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€0.86€0.91€0.95€1.007 Jun12 Jun18 Jun23 Jun28 Jun
Tracking prices since 7 Jun 2026
Create alert

Capturas y multimedia

Captura

Acerca de Tribal Pass

I want to put a number on how many times I sacrificed a tribesman to buy the rest of the group three more seconds of survival, and I genuinely lost count. Tribal Pass is a top-down runner from indie developer Tribe Tea where you shepherd a band of prehistoric survivors through an unrelenting scroll of biomes, rivers, saber-tooth encounters, hostile rival tribes, quicksand, night-darkness, and pterodactyls, all without ever hitting pause. The pitch is genuinely strange and the execution is, at its best, completely gripping. The core mechanic asks you to split your group on the fly into two, three, or four sub-formations to dodge hazards that would wipe a clustered mob in one hit. While you're doing that, you also have to monitor the food supply, pick up weapons scattered across the terrain, hunt for meat, and gather berries before starvation forces a bleaker choice: cannibalism. Yes, there is a dedicated cannibalise button. It is both horrifying and funny, and it is absolutely a legitimate survival tool. The procedurally-built runs mean no two sessions play identically, and the pixel art carries a genuinely atmospheric, neolithic weight to it, with the original soundtrack by Ruslan Viter pounding underneath in a way that feels ceremonial rather than frantic. Here is where I need to be honest with you, though. Tribal Pass has a steep and poorly-explained learning curve. The line between a threat that kills you and a threat your tribe can absorb is not communicated clearly, and reading the terrain at speed is harder than it should be, especially during night segments where contrast nearly disappears. The game asks for a lot of muscle memory before it pays anything back, and the reward loop is thin. There is no meaningful progression system between runs, no relics to carry forward, and the token economy that unlocks small bonuses does not create a strong pull to retry. Players who need visible progress to stay motivated will bounce off this hard. For a specific kind of player, though, this small oddity from 2016 earns genuine affection. If you like the idea of Oregon Trail redesigned as a reflex game, if you tolerate opaque difficulty spikes the way a genre historian tolerates bad UI, if you find procedural runs rewarding on their own terms, Tribal Pass has a handcrafted personality that bigger runner games simply do not bother with. The Steam community has built guides on animal encounters, the OST is separately available for a reason, and the first playable prototype from 2013 is packaged as a bonus. This is a game made by people who cared deeply about a strange idea. Whether it fully works is the honest question, and the answer is: about 74 percent of the time.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardstier:sub-5Tactical RunnerFormation ManagementResource SurvivalCannibal MechanicProcedural RunsPrehistoric SettingRogue-lite ElementsHardcore DifficultyTop-Down RunnerAtmospheric Pixel Art

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 10
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
400 MB available space
Graphics
512 MB VRAM
Processor
Intel Core 2 duo @ 2.2GHz

Sigue explorando

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Tribal Pass.

Reseñas y valoraciones

No hay valoraciones disponibles

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Tribe Tea
Distribuidora
Stas Shostak
Fecha de lanzamiento
26 ago 2016

Alerta de precio

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

Crear alerta

Compra mejor: guías útiles

¿Buscas más? Mira juegos como Tribal Pass →

Preguntas frecuentes sobre Tribal Pass

¿Cuánto cuesta Tribal Pass?

El precio de Tribal Pass 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 Tribal Pass más barato?

Compara los precios de Tribal Pass 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 Tribal Pass?

Tribal Pass está disponible en PC, Mac, Linux.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Tribal Pass?

Tribal Pass se lanzó el 26 de agosto de 2016.

¿Quién desarrolló Tribal Pass?

Tribal Pass fue desarrollado por Tribe Tea y publicado por Stas Shostak.