Zeno Clash
A fist-first first-person brawler set in one of the strangest worlds ever built by a tiny studio. Short, strange, and surprisingly hard to shake.
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Zeno Clash is a first-person melee brawler from ACE Team, a small Chilean studio that released this in 2009 and immediately made everyone ask why nobody had done this before. You throw punches, headbutts, and kicks from a first-person perspective across a surreal, hand-crafted world called Zenozoik, chasing a story about a creature called Father-Mother and a family that doesn't fit any archetype you've seen in games before. It is weird in the specific, committed way that only a tiny team with a singular vision can pull off. The combat is the hook and it mostly delivers. You block, dodge, and chain melee strikes against enemies who feel physically present in a way that a lot of action games miss. There are ranged weapons too, but the game clearly wants you in close, trading blows with creatures that look like nothing else in your library. Enemy variety is decent for the runtime, and the game never outstays its welcome, clocking in around five to six hours. That is not a flaw. ACE Team knew exactly how long this story needed to be and they respected that instinct. The world design is where Zeno Clash earns its cult status. Every area looks painted by a person with strong opinions. The color palette is aggressive and organic, somewhere between a fever dream and an oil painting left out in the rain. The audio design matches that energy. The soundtrack is sparse and strange in just the right places, and the ambient sounds of Zenozoik do more worldbuilding than most games manage with hours of cutscenes. If you care about atmosphere as a craft, this one rewards slow attention. On the downside, the controls and camera have not aged gracefully. Combat can feel floaty and imprecise in moments where precision actually matters, and the story's surrealism sometimes crosses the line from mysterious into just confusing. There is a checkpoint system that will occasionally frustrate you. Players looking for mechanical depth comparable to dedicated fighting games will find the combat loop gets repetitive by the final third. A co-op tower defense mode exists and is mostly forgettable. What Zeno Clash is, underneath all the strange feathers and alien architecture, is a proof of concept that small studios can build worlds nobody else would bother imagining. It released during a moment when indie games were still proving they belonged on the same shelf as major releases, and it made that argument forcefully. If you have any patience for games that prioritize place and mood over polish and comfort, this one is worth the few hours it asks for.

Indie & narrative
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Mínimos
- Processor
- Intel® Pentium® 4 3.0 GHz
- Memory
- 1 GB RAM Hard Disk Space: At least 3 GB of free space Video Card: 128 MB, Shader model 2.0, ATI 9600, NVidia 6600 or better Sound Car…
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- Processor
- Intel® core 2 duo 2.4GHz
- Memory
- 1 GB RAM Hard Disk Space: At least 3 GB of free space Video Card: Shader model 3.0, NVidia 7600…
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Información del juego
- Desarrolladora
- ACE Team
- Distribuidora
- Iceberg Interactive
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- 21 abr 2009